Just thought I would post a few here, to take us all back down the memory lane. Funny who times turn around. Young Folks are collecting and listening to these now. A few years ago -- you could not give them away at a Garage Sale. I think a lot of people *trashed* them during that time.

Found at the thrift store (.25 cents each) a collection of Elvis Presley records with three of them still sealed. They are LPM-1254 x 2 one has a blue label and has the P.D. credit on side one song #6. Just Because, LPE-1254 sealed, LSP--4579 sealed, KNLI-7047 sealed, LSP-3989, LSP-2426, LSP-3893, LPM-3864. The Nephew and Wife just had a baby and they named him Presley, HEY! Nice find.

This is a 45rpm record released on August 26, 1968 by Apple Records of "The Beatles" / Apple #2276 (1968) - original Apple Records black sleeve
- Side A - "Hey Jude" / - Side B - "Revolution"
** This was the first 45rpm single The Beatles released on their newly formed Apple Record label. "Hey Jude" was at the time the longest single
(7 minutes) ever to top the British charts. It also spent nine weeks at number one in the United States, the longest for any Beatles single. "Revolution" had two versions of the song recorded in 1968: a hard rock version, released as the B-side of the "Hey Jude" single, and a slower, bluesier version ("Revolution 1") for the album The Beatles (the "White Album").

This is a 45rpm released in 1973 by London Records of the band "ZZ Top".
(1973) - London Records #LON-203 - (in London Phase 4 Records sleeve)
- Side A - "La Grange" (1973) / - Side B - "Just Got Paid" (1972)
*** ZZ Top is an American rock band that formed in 1969 in Houston, TX. The band comprises guitarist and lead vocalist Billy Gibbons, bassist and co-lead vocalist Dusty Hill, and drummer Frank Beard. One of the few major label recording groups to have held the same lineup for more than forty years, ZZ Top has been praised by critics and fellow musicians alike for their technical mastery. Since the release of the band's debut album in January 1971, ZZ Top has become known for its strong blues roots and humorous lyrical motifs, relying heavily on double entendres and innuendo. ZZ Top's musical style has changed over the years, beginning with blues-inspired rock on their early albums, then incorporating new wave, punk rock and dance-rock, with heavy use of synthesizers. One of the best-selling musical artists in history, the band has had global album sales in excess of 50 million as of 2014. As a group, ZZ Top possesses 11 gold records and 7 platinum (13 multi-platinum) records; their 1983 album, Eliminator, remains the group's most commercially successful record, selling over 10 million units.
ZZ Top was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2004.

This is a 45rpm released in 1970 by Atlantic Records of "Led Zeppelin"
(1970) - Atlantic Records #45-2777 - (in Atlantic Records sleeve)
- Side A - "Immigrant Song" / - Side B - "Hey, Hey, What Can I Do"
*** Led Zeppelin were an English rock band formed in London in 1968. The group consisted of guitarist Jimmy Page, singer Robert Plant, bassist and keyboardist John Paul Jones, and drummer John Bonham. The band's heavy, guitar-driven sound, rooted in blues and psychedelia on their early albums, has earned them recognition as one of the progenitors of heavy metal, though their unique style drew from a wide variety of influences, including folk music. After changing their name from the New Yardbirds, Led Zeppelin signed a deal with Atlantic Records that afforded them considerable artistic freedom. Although the group was initially unpopular with critics, they achieved significant commercial success with albums such as Led Zeppelin (1969), Led Zeppelin II (1969), Led Zeppelin III (1970), their untitled fourth album (1971), Houses of the Holy (1973), and Physical Graffiti (1975). The group disbanded following Bonham's death from alcohol-related asphyxia in 1980. The band was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1995.

This is a 45rpm record released in August, 1966 by Capitol Records of
"The Beatles" / Capitol #5715 (1966) - plain white sleeve (not color sleeve)
- Side A - "Yellow Submarine" / - Side B - "Eleanor Rigby"
** Yellow Submarine, written by Paul McCartney (credited to Lennon–McCartney), with lead vocals by Ringo Starr. The single went to number 1 on every major British chart, remained at number 1 for four weeks and charted for 13 weeks. In the U.S., the song peaked at number 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and became the most successful Beatles song to feature Ringo Starr as lead vocalist.
** Eleanor Rigby was written by Paul McCartney, and credited to Lennon–McCartney.
It did not fare so well, spending four weeks at number one on the British charts, but in America it only reached the eleventh spot.

I recently came across these four really cool mono recordings by Sam Cooke on Keen records.

Cooke was with Keen for the a little over two years, a period in which he delivered up some of the prettiest romantic ballads and teen pop singles of the era, including "For Sentimental Reasons," "Everybody Loves to Cha Cha Cha," "Only Sixteen," and "(What A) Wonderful World." These were extraordinarily beautiful records, and in between the singles came some early album efforts, most notably Tribute to the Lady, his album of songs associated with Billie Holiday.

I hope you enjoy seeing these hard to find records - at least hard to find in great condition.

Found this at a thrift store and am I missing something?
I never heard of this and thru my research over 3 hours,
not in a row. Could find nothing on the subject or images.
Every time I find something unique. Well I think so.
Always very interested in finding out all I can about item.
Especially in electronics. As the age, year when produced,
how long was in production before technology surpassed
the need for program ect.
So having said that if anyone could shed some light on
the topic would that would be great. Thanks
Also was wondering if this could be counted as a computer
collectible and would be of interest in that field of collecting.

My father gave me this, I think its pretty great. The only thing is I can't find anything out about it, and I have looked, A lot. Basically the story goes that in the seventies my old man would rent out his B3 organ to touring bands, because B3s with the full size Lesley were so big that they were cheaper to rent than to haul around the country. So, when I asked him where he got it, he tells me the stones gave it to him...... in 75....... as thanks for borrowing the instrument. Now my father has had this buckle as long as I can remember, in that time he has never played a rolling stones album. Not once.
Now, I know that that he was in a local band in the 70s, and that he rented his B3 out to many touring acts, mainly but not exclusively to United Artists. On the other hand, he has slowly slipped towards senility over the last few years. So thats the gambit. if anyone knows anything about this buckle, I would be greatly appreciative to know if I'm sporting a china made rip off or a hand made priceless relic.
How often I dawn this buckle will be determined.

This is a 45rpm released in 1970 by Atlantic Records of "Wilson Pickett"
(1970) - Atlantic Records #45-2722 - (in Atlantic Golden Oldies sleeve)
- Side A - "Sugar, Sugar" / - Side B - "Cole, Cooke & Redding"
*** Wilson Pickett was an American Rhythm & Blues, soul, and rock and roll singer and songwriter. Among his best known hits are "In the Midnight Hour" (1965), "Land of 1,000 Dances", "Mustang Sally","Funky Broadway", and "Sugar, Sugar" (The Archie's). - Pickett was a popular composer writing songs that were recorded by many artists including Led Zeppelin, Van Halen, the Rolling Stones, Aerosmith, the Grateful Dead, Booker T. & the MGs, Genesis, Creedence Clearwater Revival, Hootie & the Blowfish, Echo & the Bunnymen, Roxy Music, Bruce Springsteen, Los Lobos, The Jam and Ani DiFranco, among others. Pickett appeared in the 1998 film Blues Brothers 2000, in which he performed "634–5789" with Eddie Floyd and Jonny Lang. He was previously mentioned in the 1980 film Blues Brothers, which features several members of Pickett's backing band, as well as a performance of "Everybody Needs Somebody to Love." - Pickett was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1991 and died at the age of 64 in 2006.

This is a 45rpm record released on March 15, 1968 by Capitol Records of "The Beatles" / Capitol #2138 (1968) - plain white sleeve (not color sleeve)
- Side A - "Lady Madonna" / - Side B - "The Inner Light"
* This release was recorded shortly before The Beatles left for their spiritual retreat in India and it was their final release on Capitol Records.
They would release all their following material on Apple Records.
- "Lady Madonna" (Lennon-McCartney) - Hit #4 on Billboard Hot 100
- "The Inner Light" (George Harrison) - Spent one week on the Billboard Hot 100 at #96.
The instrumental track was recorded in Mumbai, India.

My 1976 BOSTON LP RECORD with a a pic Disc. Yes the picture is on both sides. SPECIAL LIMITED PICTURE EDITION. I love Boston back then ( my driving music ) and I still like to listen to it every now and then ( when I am house cleaning...LOL ).

Gets the (_/_), (_\_), (_/_) -----> Shakin'

You do not see the Pic on the Disc too often, and A bit more Rare. Yes, and it is Playable as I played my record just fine back in the day.

Found this in a buddy's record library that they no longer wanted, tucked behind another record. Not too sure if this is an actual test press vinyl LP, but I know that the group Turn Me On Dead Man released their first album in 2006. The back is unmarked and blank having no microgrooves printed onto it. Wondering if anyone has any idea as to the validity of this item, thanks!

My prized record collection from a misspent youth.... but oh so fun. These records are what I ate, lived and breathed in the early 90's. Pioneering in the electronic music age on the west coast of Canada, I cannot find it in myself to let go of them. Many, many hours hunting the handful of specialty music shops in Vancouver. So instead I showcase them with a few interesting items from my past, incase I get the urge to brush the dust off the pair of technics 1200 turntables I still keep in my office, lol. The mask ontop of the display shelf unit is what I wore to a massive Halloween music event which I djed at. II purchased it from a high end costume shop in Toronto. The mask is made in Paris and was a monster hit when I wore it while djing. Now it is just beautiful display piece which I fealt was appropriate sitting on top of this collection... Hope you enjoy the pics

In the 1970's, 80's early 90's I use to DJ, I no longer do it but I still collect vinyl LP's, 45's. The photos don't show all there is (3 times more. It's eclectic with many styles of music like: 1968-74 funk, jazz 1930's, 40's, 50's 60's, 70's, 80's, classic rock 60's-70's, blues, Latin jazz, R&B, soul, vintage Christmas, comedy, Documentary, Du wop, 1950's rock-roll, out of print, one of a kinds, classical, rare, 400 still factory sealed and more. one of my last big find was a house that contained about 50,000 records, I made a deal with the owner and I got first pick. It took 3-4 hrs a day for 5 months to go through them all, I came out with about 5000 best of the best 98% scratch free, I still play them. I'll get the photos from that up soon.

Hi
Everyone.
I want to share with you one of my find last week, original sound track,"Star Wars"2 LP set, Mint condition with the original poster coming with it at the time.Box office of all time,in this condition not easy to find.

The first film in the series was originally released on May 25, 1977, under the title Star Wars, by 20th Century Fox, and became a worldwide pop culture phenomenon, followed by two sequels, released at three-year intervals. Sixteen years after the release of the trilogy's final film, the first in a new prequel trilogy of films was released. The three prequel films were also released at three-year intervals, with the final film of the trilogy released on May 19, 2005. In 2012, The Walt Disney Company acquired Lucasfilm for $4.05 billion and announced that it would produce three new films, with the first film, Star Wars: The Force Awakens, planned for release in 2015.[1] 20th Century Fox still retains the distribution rights to the first two Star Wars trilogies, owning permanent rights for the original film Episode IV: A New Hope, while holding the rights to Episodes I–III, V and VI until May 2020.[2]

Reactions to the original trilogy were positive, with the last film being considered the weakest, while the prequel trilogy received a more mixed reaction, with most of the praise being for the final film, according to most review aggregator websites. All six of the main films in the series were nominated for or won Academy Awards. All of the main films have been box office successes, with the overall box office revenue generated by the Star Wars films (including the theatrical Star Wars: The Clone Wars) totalling $4.38 billion,[3] making it the fifth-highest-grossing film series.[4] The success has also led to multiple re-releases in theaters for the series.

Hi
Everyone.
Yes i have some collectable record to, this one is about Wonder Woman in 3 action Adventure Stories, the graphic on the sleeve are amazing, the record condition was close to mint, the sleeve have no damage or intensive wear.
Great collectable.
That's included "The Amazons From Space", "The Secret of The Magic Tiara", "Wonder Woman Versus The War God"
Copyright National Periodical Publication Inc 1975, Division of Peter Pen Industries

This is a 45rpm in its original sleeve released in 1973 by Capitol Records of Grand Funk (Railroad) / (1973) - Capitol Records, Inc. #3660 (yellow)
- Side A - "We're An American Band" / Side B - "Creepin' "
*** Grand Funk Railroad (also known as Grand Funk) is an American blues rock band that was highly popular during the 1970's. Grand Funk Railroad toured to packed arenas worldwide. Their two No. 1 hit singles were "We're an American Band" and "The Loco-Motion". The band's name is a play on words of the Grand Trunk Western Railroad, a railroad line that ran through the band's home town of Flint, Mich.. Grand Funk Railroad continues to tour 40 shows a year and kicked off their "45 YEARS OF GRAND FUNK" tour January 25, 2014.

This is a 45rpm in its original sleeve released in 1972 by Warner Brothers and BMI of Alice Cooper / (1972) - Warner Bros. Records #WB-7596
- Side A - "Schools Out" / Side B - "Gutter Cat"
*** Alice Cooper (born Vincent Damon Furnier) is an American rock singer, songwriter, and musician whose career spans five decades. With a stage show that features guillotines, electric chairs, fake blood, boa constrictors, baby dolls, crutch and dueling sword, considered by fans and peers alike to be "The Godfather of Shock Rock"; Cooper has drawn equally from horror movies, vaudeville, and garage rock to pioneer a grandly theatrical and macabre brand of rock designed to shock. The original Alice Cooper band broke into the international music mainstream with the 1971 hit "I'm Eighteen" from the album Love It to Death, which was followed by the even bigger single "School's Out" in 1972. The band reached their commercial peak with the 1973 album Billion Dollar Babies. Cooper is currently a film actor, a golfing celebrity, a restaurateur and, since 2004, a popular radio DJ with his classic rock show Nights with Alice Cooper.
In 2011, the original Alice Cooper band was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

Some old Children colored Records with Sleeves. They are 45 rpm ones. All Christmas ones. Peter Pan Records. I think these might be from around the 1960's era ( +/- ) for date. Does the fact that they are RED rather than Black vinyl make any difference to collectors? Or Price?

Info here, says they were started in 1948:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Pan_Records

and here:
http://www.peterpanmusic.net/

Found something similar on Youtube for your listening enjoyment of these PETER PAN RECORDS:

Here's a project which may have some rewards! It's a cabinet gramophone all in pieces that needs to be cleaned and reassembled. I bought it for $50 - who can resist the challenge?!

The previous owner (now a retired senior) had acquired it when he was about 19 from his Grandfather. He decided he would take it apart and turn it into a cabinet to hold his LP records; but he was concerned about what his Grandfather would think of that and so he did it carefully and saved all the parts.

Before he had a chance to get much further on the project a job prospect lured him to the other side of the country and the cabinet and all the gramophone bits went into storage. Then life happened and he got married and had children and the gramophone cabinet conversion never happened, and it all just got moved around and put in storage through the years.

Then they retired and later they wanted to downsize to a smaller place to live and some things had to go. The old gramophone was one of them.

It's caked with old grease and needs a good cleaning, and I've been assured that all the parts are there, so there it sits waiting for me to begin the journey of making it play once again. I've been collecting old gramophone 78rpm records as I find them, to be prepared for the big day, and have sourced a place to buy the needles, but I haven't tackled the job yet.

I've read that the mainspring will be the biggest issue and if it's still working then everything else should be good to go. I'll put up another posting when it's all finished, but that won't be anytime soon!

Meanwhile if anyone who has experience with these things has some helpful tips and words of caution and encouragement I'm all ears! I'd also sure like to date it since that's eluded me even though I have a few Amphion product-line advertisements I found online which don't show pictures of what I have.

This is a 45rpm "oldies" in its original sleeve released in 1965 by Epic Records of "The Yardbirds". / (1965) - Epic Records #5-9823
- Side A - "Steeled Blues" / - Side B - "Heart Full of Soul"
*** The Yardbirds are an English rock band that had a string of hits in the mid-1960's, including "For Your Love", "Over Under Sideways Down" and "Heart Full of Soul". The group is notable for having started the careers of three of rock's most famous guitarists: Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck and Jimmy Page, all of whom are in the top five of Rolling Stone's 100 Top Guitarists list (Clapton at No. 2, Page at No. 3 and Beck at No. 5). After the Yardbirds broke up in 1968, their lead guitarist Jimmy Page founded what became Led Zeppelin. They were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1992.

This is a 45rpm "oldies" in its original sleeve released in 1966 by MGM Records of "The Animals". / (1966) - MGM Records #K-13514
- Side A - "Don't Bring Me Down" / - Side B - "Cheating"
*** The Animals were an English band of the 1960's, known for their gritty, bluesy sound and deep-voiced frontman Eric Burdon. - Hit songs included "The House of the Rising Sun", "We Gotta Get out of This Place", "It's My Life", "I'm Crying", "When I Was Young", "Sky Pilot", and "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood".
- The Animals were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1994.

Shown is a Christopher Hamill (aka Limahl) autograph. Hamill was the lead singer of the 80s pop group Kajagoogoo, of which their best known songs are Too Shy, Hang on Now, and Ooh to be Ah. After Limahl's departure from the group, he enjoyed a long and versatile solo career that continues to this day.

The autograph, which reads "To John, Great meeting ya. Cheers... Limahl," is located on the cover of Limahl's Don't Suppose album.

1975 Apple Records issue. After Beatles John wanted to make a record of music of his youth.
Record has very poor sound quality because Phil Spector was drunk in recording sessions. Some of these songs has later re-recorded by John Lennon but there is still some weird noises in background.
I read background of this record and producer Phil Spector........it was very scary stuff.

In 2010 aprox I started RADIO SUTCH on the Internet in memory of
my boyhood friend ( DAVID SCREAMING LORD SUTCH ) I kept it going for a couple of years, with records from mostly the 50s and 60s and news and comments from listeners etc.
While I was running the station I received lots of records from the public,
this is just one of those sent to me. ( I like the idea of it being in pink ) ...
I worked on the original station RADIO SUTCH in 1964 with David Sutch - Reg Calvert - Brian Paull - and Geoff Mew.
We where based on the Gun-Towers in the Thames Estuary, England.
This record was sent to me by John Burton in Essex.
Regards, COLIN DALE www.colindaleradiosutch.com

RADIO SUTCH 1964 (Colin Dale )
This demo disc was sent to me in 1964 by a group called the Others.
It's a Private Recording by Tony Pike Music Ltd and the Studio was at 31, Dryburgh Road Putney, Telephone Putney 4928.
Side one is Smokestack Lightning-OTHERS- .
Side 2 is Crazy House -OTHERS-.
I played this Demo many times on Radio Sutch 1964 - I wander wot happened to these guys ???
Regards, Colin Dale - www.colindaleradiosutch.com

This is my first console and I'm. Attempting to restore it has come along way in less than a week. I know it is a admiral and the turntable model number is rc7f2n-49na, but the sheet has been removed from back.

It started with a mixture of a moldy paint substance all over it
I would really appreciate any input with the restore ans of anyonecould help with. Figure out a model and year I would be very appreciated

Tharless24@gmail.com not looking for appraisal or to sell this is MT personal beginning if a collection thanks

This is a 45rpm in its original sleeve released in 1973 by MCA Records of Elton John / (1973) - MCA Records #MCA-40105 - Recorded in France
- Side A - "Saturday Nights All Right For Fighting"
- Side B - "Jack Rabbit" & "Whenever You're Ready"
*** Sir Elton Hercules John (born Reginald Kenneth Dwight 1947) is an English singer-songwriter, composer, pianist, record producer, and occasional actor. In his five-decade career John has sold more than 300 million records, making him one of the best-selling music artists in the world. He has more than fifty Top 40 hits and was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1994.

While many of you don't even use a record player anymore unless your a DJ, the market for records is still out there in Europe in some way, but anyway.

This is from the Music On Vinyl which is an vinyl only record label company that releases high quality 180g LP and 7" also that the vinyl pressings of titles licensed from a wide range of record companies and artists.

The soundtrack was done by Alexandre Desplat who has worked on many famous films with music.
This is the red version of vinyl and only 1500 of them were made making them rare and each one has a number you see in the back with a gold plated like substance that go from 1 to 1500. This one you see in the photo is number 62 which is very early.

Here's a YouTube link of the vinyl pressing.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DYx7uFkTaU4

Best CL curb alert find yet. Has a 4 tube amp,a 15in. and 2 5in. powered speakers. 29in. wide, 29in. tall 17in. deep. The best part is it was only two miles away and it works. Has that rich penetrating sound that that only a tube amp can produce.

This is a 45rpm "oldies" in its original sleeve released in 1966 by Laurie Records, Inc., NY of "The Royal Guardsmen". / (1966) - #LR-3366
- Side A - "Snoopy vs. The Red Baron" / - Side B - "I Needed You"
** The Royal Guardsmen are an American rock band, best known for their 1966 hit single "Snoopy vs. the Red Baron" and the Christmas follow up "Snoopy's Christmas". They made a comeback in December 2006, when they released a new Snoopy song, "Snoopy vs. Osama", which became a hit on The Dr. Demento Show. - Originally known as the Posmen, the Ocala, Florida-based sextet adopted their anglophile moniker during the British Invasion, led by The Beatles and other British artists. The Guardsmen's first single, "Baby Let's Wait", failed to make the charts, but their second offering, "Snoopy vs. the Red Baron", reached #2 in the Billboard Hot 100, remained in the bestsellers for 12 weeks, and was certified gold by the R.I.A.A. in February 1967. - www.youtube.com/watch?v=N4Hh1TE3uRk

I have several Beatles Records but I believe this is my Favorite. I was lucky enough to find it at an estate sale mixed in with about 200 other albums. I have inspected it with a bright light and I believe it has never been on a turntable. I hope you like it !!

I was Proud to share the stage with Jeannie Seely this past Sat. night. She did a great show !! A crowd favorite everywhere she performs, she is also a Warm and friendly person. She was Gracious enough to sign Autographs after the show, one being this early album for me backstage. I really enjoyed Playing Bass with this Classy Lady !!

Charlie Daniels on Epic Records. A Demonstration Recod for Radio Air play Note the Suggested Cuts to Play on Air. "Whiskey" was Previously released as"Way Down Yonder"

]]>Records / LP Recordshttp://www.collectorsweekly.com/stories/135930-1977-charlie-daniels-demonstration-lphttp://www.collectorsweekly.com/stories/135930-1977-charlie-daniels-demonstration-lpTrivia Day ! How did the Penny relate to , The 45 and The turntable ? http://www.collectorsweekly.com/stories/135879-trivia-day-how-did-the-penny-relate-to
Tue, 23 Sep 2014 16:20:22 -0700

Time for fun and Trivia :-)
How many know what the penny was for when spinning 45's ? The 45 is Shake Rattle and Roll on Decca label . Let's see who remembers :-)
Excuse the dust it sits high for me to see I can just reach it enough to put a record on :-)

These are some of my Blondie records,
I have picked up over the years.
I love this band.
They are in good playable condition just some shabby covers.
Albums -
Plastic Letters 1977
Blondie 1977
Parallell Lines 1978
Sunday Girl 12 inch 1978
Eat To The Beat 1979
Autoamerican 1980.
Also selection of 7 inch singles .

Don't know if any one has ever come across one of these before, couldn’t find any others or any info about this anomaly after web searching for quite awhile. Its the original 45 with the correct songs “Are You Lonesome Tonight” and “I Gotta Know” , but it has the wrong label on the A side. Matrix number side A: L2 WW 0106-3S A4 side B: L2 WW 0104-1S A2. Would this have any special value over the standard correctly labeled issue to an Elvis record collector ? Probably not a lot of them were issued this way.

3 Dynamic Long Playing Stereo Records. A product of Premier Albums. Songs include Cabaret,Sunrise Sunset,I'm Lost,Big Spender,The Impossible Dream,Kiss Me Again,Toyland,Yankee Doodle Dandy,The Bowery,Give My Regards,To Broadway,On A Clear Day You Can See Forever,I'll Never Be Lonely Again,Long Ago,Do I Hear A Waltz,If I Ruled The World,Habanera,Anvil Chorus,Hymn To The Sun,Swing Easy,Fibbish,Hello Dolly,Ribbons Down My Back,It Only Takes A Moment,Dancing,Just Before The Parade Goes By,Tomorrow Is Forever,The Lusty Hills,Never Say Goodbye,Thrill of A Lifetime and A Night Of Love.

Original Broadway Cast. Richard Rodgers presents Danny Kaye in Two By Two. With Harry Goz,Madeline Kahn,Michael Karm,Walter Willison,Tricia O'Neil,Marilyn Cooper and Joan Copeland. Production conceived and directed by Joe Layton. Album produced by Thomas Z. Shepard.

Herman Levin presents Rex Harrison and Julie Andrews in My Fair Lady. Original Cast. With Stanley Holloway,Robert C00te,Leonard Weir and Bob Chisholm. Produced for records by Goddard Lieberson. Recorded in London February 1,1959. Book and Lyrics by Alan Jay Lerner. Music by Frederick Loewe. Production staged by Moss Hart.

Julie Andrews/Henry Mancini perform music from the film score. Starring Julie Andrews Rock Hudson in Darling Lili. New songs by Johnny Mercer and Henry Mancini. A Blake Edwards Production. Produced by Joe Reisman. Copyright 1969 by Paramount Pictures Corporation and Geoffrey Productions,Inc. Co-starring Jeremy Kemp with Lance Percival,Michael Witney,Jacques Marin,Andre Maranne and Gloria Paul. Johnny Mercer and Henry Mancini have written their first song together. The multiple Oscar-winning team capture perfectly the fun and sentiment of the period. The film and this album represent an important first -Julie Andrews singing the songs of Mercer and Mancini.

Original Broadway Cast. Starring Richard Burton and Julie Andrews. Music by Frederick Loewe. Book and Lyrics by Alan Jay Lerner. Production staged by Moss Hart. Co-Starring RODDY MCDOWALL,ROBERT COOTE and ROBERT GOULET with M'EL DOWD. Richard Burton as King Arthur. Julie Andrews as Queen Guenevere. Camelot opened at the Majestic Theatre in New York City on December 3,1960,after engagements in Toronto, Canada and Boston.

Original Motion Picture Soundtrack. Featuring the music of Scott Joplin. Signed and Directed by George Roy Hill. Starring Paul Newman,Robert Redford and Robert Shaw. Copyright 1973 by Universal Pictures 1974 by MCA Records,Inc. written by David S. Ward. Produced by Tony Bill,Michael and Julia Phillips.

Starring Doris Day and Robert Goulet. Lyrics and music by Irving Berlin. Also with Renee Winters and Kelly Brown. Orchestra and chorus under the direction of Franz Allers. Produced by Jim Foglesong and Irving Townsend. Copyright 1963 Columbia Records.

Original Broadway Cast. Fred Hebert-David Kapp present "DONNYBROOK!" . Musical Comedy. Starring Eddie Foy and Art Lund. With Joan Fagan,Susan Johnson and Philip Bosco. Music and Lyrics by Johnny Burke. Entire Production directed and choreographed by Jack Cole. Kapp Records. "DONNYBROOK!" Opened at the 46th Street Theatre in New York City on May 18,1961.

Columbia Pictures Presents The Romulus Production of Lionel Bart's "Oliver!" An original soundtrack recording. Best Picture of the Year! Best Musical Score (adaptation) . Winner of 6 Academy Awards. Produced by John Woolf. Directed by Carol Reed. Copyright 1968 Colgems Records,Inc.

The original Broadway Cast Recording. David Merrick presents Carol Channing in The Musical Comedy "Hello,Dolly!". Also starring David Burns with Eileen Brennan,Sondra Lee,Jerry Dodge,Gordon Connell and Charles Nelson Reilly. A David Merrick & Champion Five Inc. Production. Copyright 1964, Radio Corporation of America.

from 1944 ? Frank Sinatra, on this label, sings on side 1 As Long As there's Music-- Come Out Wherever you are plus orchestra of Some Other Time. Side 2 is Some Other Time, Come Out Wherever You Are and Orchestra of As Long as There's Music. This is from the Movie "Step Lively" The Lab el is a pale cream color or faded white with type written words "Step Lively" Sung by Frank Sinatra. This is a 12" 78 record.
Across the middle of the record is printed Carnegie Hall Record Co. Carnegie Hall New York 19 NY.
I am looking for information of other existing records with this company and information about the company othet than Carnegie Hall is still in business.

All belonged to my father (deceased).
Found these in one of his suitcases.
I will list a few;
Pink Floyd - Free Four/Stay
Sam Neely -Loving You Just Crossed My Mind
Persians- I Won't Cry For You Anymore
Alex Richman-Maybe Some Other Day/Another Bad Dream
Pepper Tree-Love Is A Railroad/Workin
Madrigal-Time of The Season/Tapestry
Horizon-She's a Rainbow/Tell Me My Lady

This is a 45rpm "oldies" in its original sleeve released in 1968 by Apple Records of "Mary Hopkin". / (1968) - Apple Records #1801 (Apple 2 in UK)
- Side A - "Those Were the Days" / - Side B - "Turn, Turn, Turn"
Apple Records was a record label formed by The Beatles in 1968 - this is the second record release on the Apple label - produced by Paul McCartney
*** Mary Hopkin (born 1950), credited on some recordings as Mary Visconti, is a Welsh folk singer best known for her 1968 UK number one single "Those Were The Days" which also reached number two in the US Billboard Hot 100 selling over a million and a half copies in the U.S. alone. She was one of the first musicians to sign to The Beatles' Apple label. (The first was Frank Sinatra, other notables in the first year were Billy Preston and James Taylor, the Modern Jazz Quartet, and the Iveys, later known as Badfinger)

This 45rpm record is an early, as in High School, recording of "Kenneth" Rogers. The Band name was The Scholars and the Label is Cue Records Looks like the future superstar helped write "What did I do Wrong".

I have several of these. A friend gave them to me and he kept the 1920's Juke Box they came out of. I would have loved to have that Juke Box! It looked almost brand knew, everything on it worked, the lights and all.

I got sick when I found what he did with it! He converted the inside so it would play CD's! You could stack up the CD's, up to 12, and it would play them and drop down the next one.

These old Records do not have the damage or scratches that appear in my pictures. It's just dust and fingerprints. I would love to play some of them but don't have anything to play them on!

This is a 45rpm released in 1965 by Columbia Records of "The Byrds"
(1965) - Columbia Records #4-43424 - (no sleeve)
- Side A - "Turn, Turn, Turn"
- Side B - "She Don't Care About Time"
--
*** The Byrds were an American rock band formed in Los Angeles, California in 1964. - The band underwent multiple line-up changes throughout its existence until the group disbanded in 1973. Although they only managed to attain commercial success for a short period (1965–66), The Byrds are considered by critics to be one of the most influential bands of the 1960's. The Byrds were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1991.

For all you Mickey Mouse Fans out there. This is a Walt Disney Production made while the Mickey Mouse show was on Television. The songs are: The Leprechaun with the Flute, Bon Jour Paree, All Alone at Coney Island and When I grow up.

Madonna 12” records. I began collecting them because as a DJ from the early 80’s she was my reigning dance-floor Queen! That is to say, if your dancefloor was not rockin', it was time to get out a Madonna record and lo and behold: the dancefloor would be packed!
Sad to say, when the compact disc took over the market from vinyl records in the early 90's, I succumbed to it just like the thousands of losers out there who fell for the record company trap and began to buy CDs in lieu of records. Which until today I seriously regret! Many of Madonna's releases on CD-singles were still being issued on vinyl 12" but only as Limited editions/quantity and today they are worth quite a pretty penny (ahem, Dollar).
Regardless, on a cheerful note I recently sold my collection of 65 Madonna CD-singles on-line for $650USD. One of the CD-singles contained 3 limited postcards while another contained a mini-calendar!
In my humble opinion Madonna is no Aretha Franklin but she certainly is an extremely smart business lady.

This is a 45rpm "oldies" in its original sleeve released in 1965 by MGM Records of "The Animals". / (1965) - MGM Records #K-13414
- Side A - "It's My Life" / - Side B - "I'm Going to Change the World"
*** The Animals were an English band of the 1960's, known for their gritty, bluesy sound and deep-voiced frontman Eric Burdon. - Hit songs included "The House of the Rising Sun", "We Gotta Get out of This Place", "It's My Life", "I'm Crying", "When I Was Young", "Sky Pilot", and "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood".
- The Animals were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1994.

This is a 45rpm in its original color picture sleeve released in 1966 by RCA Records of "The Monkees" / Colgems #66-1002 (1966)
- Side A - "I'm A Believer"
- Side B - ""Steppin' Stone"
*** The Monkees are an American pop/rock band that released music in their original incarnation between 1966 and 1970, with subsequent reunion albums and tours in the decades that followed. Formed in Los Angeles in 1965 for the American television series The Monkees, which aired from 1966–1968, the musical acting quartet was composed of Americans Micky Dolenz, Michael Nesmith, and Peter Tork, and Englishman Davy Jones. The band's music was initially supervised by producer Don Kirshner. The Monkees had international hits, including "Last Train to Clarksville", "Pleasant Valley Sunday", and "Daydream Believer". At their peak in 1967, the band outsold both the Beatles and the Rolling Stones. As of 2012, their albums and singles have sold over 65 million copies worldwide.

This is a 45rpm in its original color picture sleeve released in 1966 by RCA Records of "The Monkees" / Colgems #66-1001 (1966)
- Side A - "Last Train To Clarksville"
- Side B - ""Take A Giant Step"
*** The Monkees are an American pop/rock band that released music in their original incarnation between 1966 and 1970, with subsequent reunion albums and tours in the decades that followed. Formed in Los Angeles in 1965 for the American television series The Monkees, which aired from 1966–1968, the musical acting quartet was composed of Americans Micky Dolenz, Michael Nesmith, and Peter Tork, and Englishman Davy Jones. The band's music was initially supervised by producer Don Kirshner. The Monkees had international hits, including "Last Train to Clarksville", "Pleasant Valley Sunday", and "Daydream Believer". At their peak in 1967, the band outsold both the Beatles and the Rolling Stones. As of 2012, their albums and singles have sold over 65 million copies worldwide.

Thanks to Manikin who posted one of these a while back, I saw hers and had to get one of my own. I just love this cartoon and the gas station and 58 chevy, you see, my name is Ed and my wife is Peggy so I just had to have this album. I have to find a turntable now so I can play it, love these old songs. I go to cruise night car shows and there often playing old songs like these. Increase Records has a series of these 1955- 1963.

This is a 45rpm "oldies" in its original sleeve released in 1973 by Columbia Records of the band "Chicago".
(1973) - Columbia Records #4-45880
- Side A - "Jenny"
- Side B - "Feelin' Stronger Every Day"
*** Chicago is an American rock band formed in 1967 in Chicago, Illinois.
The group had a steady stream of hits throughout the 1970s and 1980s. Chicago is one of the longest-running and most successful rock groups, and one of the world's best-selling groups of all time, having sold more than 100 million records.
A new album, titled "Chicago XXXVI: Now", is scheduled for release on July 4, 2014.

Purchased this large Led Zeppelin "back patch" from a man whose brother had it in storage for years. Since 70s? Was never sewn on anything. I am a huge fan of Led Zeppelin and have sewn the patch on a great, fitted jean vest.
Art on patch looks like it was painted on.

I've had it forever but classics like Beauty and the Beast came from this song by Ireene Wicker
Same as Jack and the Beanstalk, etc. These were the start.. So beauty and the beat did not cone out until 45 years after Ireene wrote these songs. Which just makes them so hard to find..

Cinderella is famous yes but white away the songs were made for the movie so everyone kept it... The story here, is that she wrote this is a song 45 that 45 years later inspired ' one OC the greatest animated movies ever... So not many were kept and if you don't believe me try and find one.

Found this today at an area thrift store for 99 cents (the album contains 16 records). Not my usual thing to buy but the price was right. Inside I find a 19198-A victor that appears to be signed by the composer "Edwin Tillman". I'm no expert but looking under a 15x loupe, it looks legit. Appreciate any and all thoughts on this, would also appreciate any direction on who may be able to help, thanks.

The White Album by The Beatles, First Pressing 0016802 with all inserts and all of the six misspelled song titles on the label. This is the first collectible record that i've bought and just received today. I'm excited because it's my first collectible acquired, but i'm not quite sure how i did; i've read so many different reviews online and i'm pretty sure some as*hole will try to rip me off when i try to get a true value on it. But all in all, i'm pretty stoked about finding and expanding my collection.

THIS IS SOMETHING I PUT ON THE WALL TO REMEMBER THE PAST AND TO REMEMBER THERE IS BEAUTY IN SONG
I OPENED THE DOOR TO MY YARD THIS MORNING ABOUT 5AM AND THE MORNING WAS JUST BEAUTIFUL , BRIGHT AND SILENT EXCEPT FOR THE GENTLE SONG OF SOME BIRDS AND FOR SOME REASON ELVIS CAME TO MY MIND. I GUESS BECAUSE I ENJOYED HIS MUSIC IN THE PAST AND I ASSOCIATED IT WITH THIS MOMENT OF ENJOYING THE JOY OF GOD'S NATURAL BEAUTY.

I found this record and a number of others like it when I got home after buying a large record collection I picked up at a Goodwill. I looked for the label all over the internet and couldn't find any records for sale like them. I then discovered they are actually from NARA. I contacted the Office of Inspector General and reported that I might have found some lost or stolen records. I was put in touch with a nice man from NARA who researched the records for a couple of months and confirmed that they did indeed come from the National Archives. The why and when they were made they are still looking into. They thanked me for reporting them and the best part is they have said they will not seek recovery of the items so I get to keep them. They look great in my collection and I can't wait to hear the different versions I have. Sadly I have to wait until I can get another record player as mine broke last year.

FOUND THIS ABOUT 15 YEARS AGO VERY UNIQUE .VINYL RECORD SET 33RPM. GENREAL DOUGLAS MACARTHUR KEY NOTE SPEECH & RETURN FROM SAN FRANCICO FROM KOREA SPEECH.. SENT BY THE FEDERAL CIVIL DEFENCE ADMINISTARTION TO THE RADIO STATION KGY IN OLYMPIA WA. IN 1952 ALL THE RECORDS ARE IN GREAT SHAPE SOME PLAY BACKWORDS .. LOOKING FOR ANYBODYS THOUGHTS ON THIS ?.. ANYONE HAVE SIMULAR ITEM? ANY INFO WOULD BE APPRECIATED..

This is a 45rpm in its original sleeve released in 1972 by MCA Records of Elton John / (1972) - MCA Records #MCA-40000 Stereo
- Side A - "Crocodile Rock" / #MC-1024
- Side B - "Elderberry Wine" / #MC-1025
*** Sir Elton Hercules John (born Reginald Kenneth Dwight 1947) is an English singer-songwriter, composer, pianist, record producer, and occasional actor. In his five-decade career John has sold more than 300 million records, making him one of the best-selling music artists in the world. He has more than fifty Top 40 hits and was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1994.

This is a 45rpm released in 1965 by Motown Records of "The Supremes"(1965) - Motown Records #M-1083 - (no sleeve)
- Side A - "Who Could Ever Doubt My Love"
- Side B - "I Hear A Symphony"
--
*** The Supremes were an American female singing group and the premier act of Motown Records during the 1960s. They were the most successful of Motown's acts and still are America's most successful vocal group with 12 number one singles on the Billboard Hot 100. - In 1967, the group was renamed Diana Ross & the Supremes.

Gramophone needle pyramid tin picked from another estate sale today.
It feels fairly full and needles come out one at a time.
On the way home we saw a big cardboard sign, 'ESTATE SALE'. Always a good diversion, just wished I'd seen it earlier.

This is a 45rpm "oldies" in its original sleeve released in 1974 by MGM Records of Jim Stafford. / (1974) - MGM Records #M-14737
- Side A - "The Last Chant" / - Side B - "Wildwood Weed"
*** James Wayne "Jim" Stafford (born 1944) is an American comedian, musician, and singer-songwriter. While prominent in the 1970's for his records "Swamp Witch", "Under The Scotsman's Kilt", "Spiders & Snakes", "My Girl Bill", and "Wildwood Weed", Stafford has headlined at his own theater in Branson, Missouri since 1990. Stafford is self-taught on guitar, fiddle, piano, banjo, organ and harmonica.

Hello! This is a warning to Aliens! In case they want to come visit!!! It says "WE CAME IN PEACE FOR ALL MANKIND" !! Do not believe this, Since beginning of Mankind, we have murdered, raped, 100's of Wars, Man will kill and steal from his own family! BUT! I am available for Alien cross-breeding! Please send me photos of possible ladies! Waiting! Don the toracat

This is a 45rpm "oldies" in its original sleeve released in 1969 by Roulette Records of Tommy James & The Shondells
(1969) - Roulette Records #R-7028
- Side A - "Crimson and Clover"
- Side B - "Some Kind of Love"
*** Tommy James and the Shondells are an American rock and roll group whose period of greatest success came in the late 1960's. - They had two No. 1 singles in the U.S. - "Hanky Panky" (1966) and "Crimson and Clover" (1969) and also charted twelve other Top 40 hits, including five in the top ten: "I Think We're Alone Now", "Mirage", "Mony Mony", "Sweet Cherry Wine", and "Crystal Blue Persuasion". -- ("Crimson and Clover" went to No. 1 the very next day after they appeared on the "Ed Sullivan Show")

These are two 45rpm "oldies" by the Scottish singer Donovan (1969-1970)
(1969) - Epic Records #5-10434
- Side A - "Atlantis" - Side B - "To Susan on the West Coast Waiting"
(1970) - Epic Records #5-10649
- Side A - "Riki Tiki Tavi" - Side B - "Roots of Oak"
*** Donovan (born Donovan Philips Leitch, 1946) is a Scottish singer, songwriter and guitarist. Initially labelled an imitator of Bob Dylan, he developed an eclectic and distinctive style that blended folk, jazz, pop, psychedelia, and world music (notably calypso). His most successful singles in the 1960's included the early UK hits "Catch the Wind", "Colours" and "The Universal Soldier" in 1965, while "Sunshine Superman" and "Mellow Yellow" hit the U.S. charts along with "Hurdy Gurdy Man". He became a friend of leading pop musicians including Joan Baez, Brian Jones, and The Beatles.
He continued to perform and record sporadically in the 1970's and 1980's.
Donovan was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2012.

Been in search for one of these for a long time only to find one cheap and in great shape at a Antique Store, I added the frame to hang in my office, have no plans to remove the cover over lay, as I know so many have been removed to reveal the Butcher Cover.

First heard this on the radio in 1966-radio Luxembourg on 208 metres on medium wave band.
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Purchased in 1982 from the hmv store in Birmingham City centre.
This year celebrates the 40 the anniversary when abba won the Eurovision song contest in 1974 and abba programmes shown over the weekend on bbc 4.

This is a tool to sharpen bamboo phonograph needles. Thats right, they used bamboo and fiber needles to play cylinder records as well as saphire, diamond , and steel needles. You would place the dull bamboo deedle into the hand held tool and with a squeezing of the grip, theworn bamboo needle would have a sliver shaved off, leaving a sharp, clean point to play another song. These needles usually only lasted for one or two cylinder record plays, then they would have to be resharpened. These needles are still available today, available through antique record player dealers.............. hotairfan

Sorting out albums that I bought at an auction, lot of old jazz and blues. Who ever had them had really good tast in music and really took care of them. Anyway going through them to check out their condition and found this autographed album signed by Frankie Laine. Checked online to compare with other signed items by him and it seemed very genuied. By the way I payed $2 for about 80 of them...cool

]]>Music Memorabiliahttp://www.collectorsweekly.com/stories/110524-frankie-laine-findhttp://www.collectorsweekly.com/stories/110524-frankie-laine-findsaturday night live album signed by the entire original casthttp://www.collectorsweekly.com/stories/110399-saturday-night-live-album-signed-by-the
Tue, 07 Jan 2014 10:45:42 -0800

are the sigs authentic i was told by 2 people is wasn't real ...1 said probably and employee of the cast signed all of them ....i don't see how

Teenage Triangle is a joint album by three pop artists, Shelley Fabares, James Darren and Paul Petersen. It was released in 1963 on Colpix Records and included 12 tracks with 4 songs from each of the three singers. The album was produced and arranged by Stu Phillips. It was available in both mono and stereo, catalogue numbers CP-444 and SCP-444.
1. "Goodbye Cruel World (James Darren)" 2:24
2. "Johnny Angel (Shelley Fabares)" 2:21
3. "She Can't Find Her Keys (Paul Petersen)" 2:32
4. "Her Royal Majesty (James Darren)" 2:13
5. "Johnny Loves Me (Shelley Fabares)" 2:21
6. "Keep Your Love Locked (Paul Petersen)" 2:12

I found this album when I was going through some old boxes at my parents home. I grew up loving Elvis Presley.

The rare thing about this album is that on one side, is "Elvis. Moody Blue" and the other side was mislabeled, and labeled as "The Best of Dolly Parton". Mind you, it still has the Elvis songs on the mislabeled side.

I found out that that very few of these albums were shipped out before the mistake in labeling was even noticed.

I was hoping a collector may know about this..I am not a collector, so I am asking for any input on if anyone lese has seen this album.

This one I found at a thrift shop where they only take donation for items that you want. I took a lot (big lot) of LP's and 45's and they praised me for taking them off of their hands. In fact they said that they had many more but had no room to put them because these were taking up all the space so I took all that I could take and more. I only recently got so very involved in collecting records and have found it so very fascinating. So now I am completely over whelmed with the thrill of it all. I have to admit though that I did find other recordings, both LP's and 45's and praising each of them. However, my first find is my prize and I just love it. Actually I absolutely love Deneice Williams to death She has such a uniquely beautiful voice and sings lots, and lots, of my favorite song, gospel as well. The album is black with a script in one corner printed in gold, FOR PROMOTION ONLY, Ownership reserved by CBS, Sale is unlawful. This is my first find and will hold it as a the beginning of my newest hobby of collecting and I do have many.

valentino97 placed a Barnabus Collins game card, and it reminded me of my Dark Shadows album and poster from the original show.

I must have been about ............ a toddler back then, yeah, I was a toddler, but my older sister was a young teen...who was "taken" by Quentin...posters, any magazine with his name or face (especially with his face), stickers...etc

We seldom watched TV, being a kid in the country with barns, ponds, land, old dumps and old houses to explore.....ok, so maybe I was a tiny older than toddler age, but Cheryl is still older than me...but when DARK SHADOWS came on...POOF - there we were

I still listen to this record on occasion

T'was an amazing time to be a kid

Thanks for stirring old memories, valentino97

(I think I'll place the main cat as Psych Records...can you imagine ;-)

These are both 45 RPM records featuring more than one song on a side. Interesting, as they must have preceded 33 1/3 RPM extended play record albums. Unfortunately, I could not find a production date on either item.

Aside from that, the covers and text are "works of art" in themselves.

I've added this Marvin Gaye album to my collection but I can't find anything anywhere on the internet about it. Can anyone assist with information as to publication date, first pressing, and value. Thanks.

A beautifully engraved Chicago record album that have two wonderful engravings on the inside sleeve and the record is in great condition. The cover was engraved by one of the engravers at the U. S. Mint.

This is the LP, "Billie Holiday: The Original Recordings," released in 1973 by Columbia Records Mono. Side one includes, "God Bless the Child," "All of Me," "You've Changed," "What a Little Moonlight Can Do," "Mean to Me," and "Them There Eyes." Side two contains, "Miss Brown to You," "My Man," "Gloomy Sunday," "I Cried For You," and "The Man I Love."

This is a lot of 8 Beatles and 2 John Lennon LPs. All are first issues/original releases from the 1960s. Some are in Mono and others are in Stereo. The lot includes:

-Meet The Beatles! released by Capitol Records
-Magical Mystery Tour released by Capitol Records
-Beatles '65 released by Capitol Records
-The Early Beatles released by Capitol Records
-A Hard Day's Night released by United Artists Records
-The Beatles' Second Album released by Capitol Records
-Something New released by Capitol Records
-Help! released by Capitol Records
-Double Fantasy released by Geffen Records
-Walls and Bridges released by Apple Records

This is a lot of 11 Sammy Davis, Jr. LPs. All date to the late 60s and 70s. The lot includes:

-Hey There! It's Sammy Davis Jr. At His Dynamite Greatest released by MCA Records
-Something For Everyone released by Motown
-Sammy Davis Jr. at the Cocoanut Grove released by Reprise Records
-That's All! released by Reprise Records
-As Long As She Needs Me released by Reprise Records
-Here's Lookin' At You released by Decca Records
-I've Gotta Be Me released by Reprise Records
-Sammy Davis Jr.: A Live Performance of His Greatest Hits released by Warner Bros. Records, Inc.
-Sammy Davis Jr.'s Greatest Hits released by Reprise Records
-Now released by MGM Records Corp.
-Sammy Steps Out released by Reprise Records

This is a lot of 31 Frank Sinatra LPs. All are from the late 60s, 70s, and 80s. The lot includes:

-Songs for Young Lovers released by Capitol Records
-Dedicated to You released by Columbia
-Sinatra & Company released by Reprise Records
-Frank Sinatra's Greatest Hits Vol. 2 released by Reprise Records
-Some Nice Things I've Missed released by Reprise Records
-Francis Albert Sinatra & Antonio Carlos Jobim released by Reprise Records
-Frank Sinatra's Greatest Hits! released by Reprise Records
-Sinatra Trilogy: Past, Present, Future released by Reprise Records
-Cycles released by Reprise Records
-Frank Sinatra: The Voice: The Columbia Years 1943-1952 released by Columbia
-It Might As Well Be Swing released by Reprise Records
-Moonlight Sinatra released by Reprise Records
-Sinatra Swings released by Reprise Records
-Come Fly with Me released by Capitol Records
-The Rare Sinatra released by Capitol Records
-Swing Easy released by Capitol Records
-Put Your Dreams Away released by Columbia
-Frank Sinatra Sings for Only the Lonely released by Capitol Records
-Sinatra at the Stands released by Reprise Records
-Sinatra: The Main Event: Live released by Repeise Records
-Try a Little Tenderness released by Capitol Records
-Love is a Kick released by Columbia
-Close to You released by Capitol Records
-She Shot Me Down released by Reprise Records
-L.A. is My Lady released by Qwest Records
-The Voice released by Columbia
-a Swingin' Affair! released by Capitol Records
-Ring-a-ding-ding! release by Reprise Records
-The Great Hits of Frank Sinatra released by Capitol Records
-Ol' Blue Eyes is Back released by Reprise Records
-Come Dance with Me! released by Capitol Records

This Album is Special in more ways than one. It has Jim Reeves Story, Narrated by Jim Reeves, on side #1, Third position. Also the Liner Notes were written by the Great Chet Atkins ! Also recorded on the R.C.A. Victor label, it was recorded in 1966.

Another Jim Reeves Album Recorded on the R.C.A. Victor label in 1966.. This song was written by Cindy Walker and was an instant hit when it was released It hit home in the Hearts of the Military Families. Unfortunately Jim left us before it was released.

This is my Bright Eyes Box Set that is out of print and very hard to find 1st press LBJ-53. It is five albums on 7 lp's and is the works of Conor Oberst of Bright Eyes, most recently his song "This is the First Day of my Life" is featured on the newest Zillow Real Estate Database commercial. Omaha, Nebraska native Oberst is an Indie rock singer songwriter who's Bright Eyes solo project was launched in 1995, and this collection in box set was released in January 1998. There are no boundaries on my music on vinyl collection, if a good artist or song I add it for my listening pleasure, being open to new music is being a true enthusiast.

This is the 1st Day - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwFS69nA-1w
Perfect Sonnet - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QXYM6-X8c3o

One of the rarest recordings and often considered the holy grail for Freddie Mercury and Queen collectors and I own two in my collection. This was a pseudo name used by Freddie to record this in 1973, as a pun on the glam rocker Gary Glitter and the metallic yarn Lurex.
"I Can Hear Music" is a remake of Phil Spectors hit previously recorded by The Ronettes and Beach Boys, and "Going Back" was written by Carole King and previously been a hit for Dusty Springfield and The Byrds.
This single pre-dated the release of the first Queen album and is recorded on the Anthem label catalog number AN-204 and also available in promo and remix versions, all are highly sought by collectors.
I own one in NM condition, and the other in VG+

I recorded it to youtube 2 years ago here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IoS1mfilwm0

45 record carry case and 45's . Case has 3 dimensional squares . It is not in greatest condition but one of 3 I found going through my records today . I had it stored upstairs so long I forgot I had it . Love the funky look and so Mod looking . To bad it is in such rough shape but it is how I got it years ago .

Something I picked up Years ago, this is a recorded on record letter back home to this soldiers Family. This is the only one I have seen through the Years, although there may be many more out there somewhere.

Another rare version of the Grateful Dead Anthem of the Sun album from my collection is this "White Label Promo". On the Warner Brothers-7 Arts label with the same catalog number WS-1749, the same as the white cover remix version I posted earlier. White label promo's were produced in lower numbers and intended for radio stations use only. Released on July 18th 1968 and is the first album to feature the bands second drummer, Mickey Hart who joined the band in 1967.

Listen to the entire album on Youtube here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OnNkKAKPHqY

From my extensive Grateful Dead collection I would like to share another rarity. This is the Anthem of the Sun remix lp (WS 1749) with the rare white cover as opposed to the common purple cover. This is a unique 3rd mix of Anthem was remixed in the summer of 1972 by Phil Lesh and it has an E chord at the end of side one rather than fading out with Weir repeating "by and by"
The original purple cover was released in 1968 and and ranks at number 287 on Rolling Stone magazines list of the 500 greatest albums ever released

Pictured is a Frankie Valli and The Four Seasons 45 that features "Who Loves You" and "December, 1963 (Oh, What A Night)." The latter song is originally from the LP, "Who Loves You." This 45 was released in 1975 by Warner Bros. Records Inc.

Shown is a Deep Purple 45 that contains two edited versions of the song "Smoke on the Water." The 4 minute and 34 second version on the left is originally from the Warner Bros. album, "Made in Japan" and was released in 1973. The 3 minute and 48 second version on the right is originally from the Warner Bros. album, "Machine Head" and was released in 1972. This 45 was released by Warner Bros. Records Inc.

Pictured is a Bob Welch 45 containing the songs "Hot Love, Cold World" and "Sentimental Lady." Both songs are originally from the LP, "French Kiss." This 45 was released by Capitol Records, Inc. in 1977.

Shown is a Brenda Lee 45 with the songs "Sweet Nothin's" and "I Want to be Wanted." The former song was originally by Decca on September 28, 1959 while the latter song was originally released by Decca on September 19, 1960. This album was released by MCA Records, Inc. in 1973.

Shown is an Al Martino 45 featuring "To The Door of the Sun" on one side and "Volare (Nel Blu Dipinto Di Blu) on the other. The former song was originally released in November of 1974 and the latter song was originally released in September of 1975. This 45 was released by Capitol Records, Inc. as part of their Starline: Super Oldies series.

Shown is a Waylon Jennings 45 featuring "Luckenbach, Texas (Back to the Basics of Love)" on side A and "Belle of the Ball" on side B. The album was released in 1977 by RCA Records as part of their Gold Standard Series.

Shown is a 45 with The Beatles songs "Eleanor Rigby" and "Yellow Submarine." Both songs were produced by George Martin and written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney. The album was released by Capitol Records, Inc.

Shown is a 45 featuring the Maynard Ferguson songs "Gonna Fly Now (Theme From 'Rocky')" and "The Fly." Both songs are originally from the Columbia LP, "Conquistador" and were released in 1977 by CBS Inc. This 45 was released by Columbia.

Shown is a 45 featuring "That's Amore" and "Memories Are Made of This" sung by Dean Martin. The former song was originally released in September of 1953 and the latter song was originally released in November of 1955. This 45 was released by Star Line of Capitol Records Inc. as part of their "Super Oldies: Biggest Hits by the Brightest Stars" series.

Queens Village, New York Doo-Wop band, The Rockin' Chairs "Rockin' Chair Boogie" backed with "A Kiss is a Kiss" on Recorte Records label #402. Only 200,000 copies were sold of this single and Billboard Magazine described "A Kiss is a Kiss" as a "Hot Record!"

This is the original version of Mr. Sandman by The Chordettes released in 1954 on Cadence label #1247, and backed with "I Don't Want to See You Crying". The single reached #1 on US Billboard Charts and #11 on the UK charts in 1954. The Four Aces version charted even higher to #9 on the UK charts. Numerous version were released by names such as The Supremes, Chet Atkins, Marvin Gaye and The Chipmunks as well as many others.
Notice the Cadence records founder gets credit on label "Knees played by Archie Bleyer"

The Platters "The Great Pretender" backed with "I'm just a dancing Partner" on 1955 Maroon Mercury label #70753X45. The Great Pretender reached #1 on both R&B and Pop charts for seven weeks in 1956, and ranks #360 on Rolling Stone Magazines Top 500 ever list.

Rare first pressing of The Dell Vikings featuring Krips Johnson "Whispering Bells" backed with Don't Be a Fool" on FEE BEE label #FB-214 from May of 1956. The Dell Vikings Doo-Wop group were members of the Air Force in Pittsburg, Pennsylvania.

1956 Bobby Dukoff on tenor sax with his orchestra with the Ray Charles Chorus play, "I Can't Give You Anything But Love" and "I Gotta Right to Sing the Blues" on RCA Victor white label promotional label. From the Bobby Dukoff album "Sax in Silk"

1959 DooWop Classic, The Flamingos "Goodnight Sweetheart" Extended Play 45rpm on the End Label #EP-205. "I Only Have Eyes for You" is a cover and The Flamingos version ranks #157 on Rolling Stones Magazines Top 500 ever and peaked at #11 on Billboards Hot 100 Charts.

Quick listen links:
I Only Have Eyes for You - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pn8SFdyOA_M
Goodnight Sweeheart - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b7DbUAAK0_E
Music Maestro Please - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wx0OA-EN27E
I'm In the Mood for Love - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0tqUDsxwaN0

1964 Ronettes "Walking in the Rain" single backed with "How Does it Feel" on Phil Spectors Philles Records #123 with rare and hard to find original picture sleeve. Walking in the Rain reached #23 on Billboard 100 in 1964 and #28 on R&B single charts in 1965.
both sides of P/S are shown above (identical)

quick listen links:
Walking in the Rain - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sxgQH9g2okE
How Does it Feel - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TemuLquhDp8

1956 Elvis Presley extended play 45rpm record #EPA-992. Extended play 45's differ from 45 singles by having 3 or more songs on one 7" disc. This EP contains Presley's Paralyzed, which reached #59 on Billboard Pop charts in 1956. Rip it Up is a cover of Bill Haley and the Comets and Little Richards #1 R&B charter. Love Me was another cover that was not realesed as a single to not confuse people with Love Me Tender, and climbed to #2 on Billboard 100, and peaked at #7 on R&B chart. When My Blue MoonTurns to Gold Again is a cover of a 1941 country song.

1958 Elvis Presley single, "Don't" and "I Beg of You" 45rpm with original picture sleeve. First pressing on RCA Victor #47-7150. Don't was Presley's 11th number one hit, and peaked at #4 on the R&B charts. I Beg of You peaked at #8 on the Billboard 100 charts and #4 on Billboard hot country singles chart.

1970 Elvis Presley "Kentucky Rain" backed with "My Little Friend" 45rpm with original picture sleeve on RCA Victor label #47-9791. Kentucky Rain reached #16 on Pop charts but never appeared on an Elvis LP until 2000 on the re-release of "From Elvis in Memphis"
Kentucky Rain was written by Eddie Rabbitt and features pianist Ronnie Milsap

1969 Elvis Presley "Rubberneckin" and "Don't Cry Daddy" 45rpm in original picture sleeve on RCA Victor label #47-9768. Used in the Universal Picture film "Change of Habit" and issued in conjunction with the movie premier. Rubberneckin' reached #6 on the Billboard Top 100 in 1969.

1959 Elvis Presley's, "I Need Your Love Tonight" and "A Fool Such As I" single with original picture sleeve on RCA Victor label #47-7506. I Need Your Love Tonight reached #4 on Billboard Pop singles chart in 1959. A Fool Such As I first reached #4 on country charts by Hank Snow in 1953, and Elvis' version reached #1 on UK charts, and #2 on US charts, and #16 on R&B charts in 1959.

I have doubles of Elvis Presley's 1956 hit single "Hound Dog" backed with "Don't Be Cruel" in the rare original picture sleeves. Hound Dog was originally designated as the B side in 1956 but both sides were big chart topping hits, so later 1960's reissues were designated as a double A sided singles. Don't be Cruel ranks #197 on Rolling Stone Magazines Top 500 ever, and inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 2002. Hound Dog simultaneously ranked #1 on Pop, R&B, and country charts for 11 weeks in 1956 and influenced Elvis's decision to get into Rock n' Roll music. Hound Dog ranks #19 on Rolling Stones Top 500 ever list.

Elvis Presley's original 1957 "Jailhouse Rock" backed with "Treat Me Nice" with original picture sleeve. RCA Victor 47-7035. This was first released on 45rpm on September, 24th 1957 for the release of motion picture "Jailhouse Rock" Jailhouse charted at #1 and Treat Me Nice charted at #18. Places #67 on Rolling Stone Mags Top 500 ever.

1961 The Shirelles "Mama Said" backed with "Blue Holiday" on Scepter label #1217. Mama Said reached #4 on The Billboard Hot 100, and #2 on the R&B chart. It has been covered a few times since The Shirelles original and was the inspiration for Van Morrisons "Days like This"

1956 Fats Domino hit cover of "Blueberry Hill" backed with "Honey Chile" on Imperial label 5047. First published in 1940, Blueberry Hill was recorded multiple times previous to this most popular version, which reached #2 for 3 weeks in 1956. Fats Domino version ranks #82 on Rolling Stone magazine's Top 500 songs ever.

Shown is a 45 containing the George Harrison songs "My Sweet Lord" and "Isn't It a Pity." Both songs are originally from the LP, "All Things Must Pass" and were produced by Harrison and Phil Spector. This 45 was released by Apple Records, Inc. of Columbia Records.

Rare and hard to find white label promo of Dreamlovers "Zoom Zoom Zoom" backed with "While We Dancing" released in 1962 on the Heritage label # H107. Heritage records was located at 250 South Broad Street in Philadelphia, now the home of the famous Merriam Theater.

Original 1958 Oscar McLollie and Jeanette Baker 45rpm "Hey Girl-Hey Boy" backed with "Let Me Know, Let Me Know" released on the Class label #228. This was Oscars only Pop hits and reached #61 in 1958.This tune was covered by Louis Prima and Keely Smith and turned into the title of one of their movies in 1959.

Rare 1962 Doo Wop Teen Surf Bopper 45 by The Stompers , "Quarter to Four Stomp" on Landa label #684 backed with "Foolish One"
"Quarter To Four Stomp" made the Billboard Hot 100 chart in the most minimal possible way, one week at No. 100 (the week of 3 March 1962)

Rare and Very hard to find White labeled promotional copy of 1953 Johnny Christmas and The Dynamics "Dum Dum" (The lollipop song) 45rpm on P.D.Q. Records # L-5002. After uploading this should be the only copy posted on the internet, promo or not.

Here is a video that contains a clip of the song along with breif Dum Dum history: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ZOhGonh-CE

Both sides I would consider Hits, so I wonder which side was considered the "B" side. This is the 1957 pressing of Buddy Holly and The Crickets' hits, "Oh Boy" and "Not Fade Away" on Brunswick label #55035.

Buddy Holly and The Crickets, "That'll be the Day" backed with "I'm looking for Someone to Love" on Brunswick label first pressing from 1957. Brunswick records #55009. I really enjoyed "The Buddy Holly Story" movie and recommend watching to any music fan. I wasn't born until 1972, but have an appreciation for the oldies.

In 1959 RCA with the Glenn Miller estate, released this three LP album of some of Glenn Miller and his Orchestras' radio shows. The albums are in a hard bound cloth binding, and have a booklet inside explaining how the albums were made. The front page has a photograph of a letter from Helen Miller (Glenn's widow) giving her approval to the album. Previous to releasing this album, Victor released a 5 LP album by the name of Glenn Miller, Second Pressing, it was released in a hardbound leatherette binding in 1958.

The plane Glenn Miller was traveling in disappeared over the English Channel in 1944, the plane took off in a dense fog from an RAF base in England to Paris to rejoin the his Army Air Force Band that was already in Paris. The plane experienced icing conditions and went down.

Miller was a perfectionist, after each of the 15 minute Chesterfield broadcasts, Miller would listen to the show on glass disks (which theses albums were made from) to find out who was messing up during the broadcast so George T Simon says in his biography of Miller.

These radio recordings have been re-released on CD, along with those he recorded with the Andrews Sisters, which I also own, I also have the Complete Glenn Miller LPs and box CD set, along with his Army Air Force Recordings LPs and CDs. Recently I found an MP disk with 90 of his Chesterfield radio shows on it.

I was given this phonograph as a birthday present a few months ago. It's looks like the previous owner sprayed varnish all over it. I'd like to take it apart and restore it. The reproducer fell off and I have no idea how to put it back on. Do these phonographs come apart easy? Any advise on how to restore would be greatly appreciated. Thank you

Restoration is complete! It was a lot of fun. The first photo is the machine before the restoration. Below is a link to it playing a song.

Sound a lot like Elvis Presley's "Jailhouse Rock" to my ears, but I guess all the musicians were trying to achieve Elvis' success at that time.
Joe Hughes "Make Me Dance Little Ant" backed with "I Can't go on this Way" on the Kangaroo Label # KA-106

This is another one of my favorite oldies, it's my near mint first edition Marvin Gaye "That Stubborn Kinda Fellow" LP from 1963. It's hard to find in good condition on the original Tamla label #239 in Mono.

Rockabilly Hall of Famer Rusty York's true passion and original roots was in country and bluegrass music. Although "Sugaree" earned him his spot in the Rocabilly Hall of Fame, he returned to bluegrass.
Here is a extended play (EP) 45rpm from my collection on the Blue Grass Special label #EP-600
track listing:
1) Little Rosewood Casket
2) Pretty Polly
3) Roving Gambler
4) Girl in Sunny Tennessee
5) Little Maggie
6) East Virginia Blues

I just found this in a large box of LP's I purchased at auction for $2 along with a few other rarities. I'm sure everyone has heard the Casey Kasem American Top 40 radio show, usually played on Sunday mornings when radio DJ's had the day off.
Unfortunately I received a warning email from Clear Channel Corporation's legal department stating I was NOT to sell this item or they would peruse legal action against me. They claim theses were loaned to radio stations and were to be destroyed or returned to them. There is only one licensee that is allowed to sell them online.

Pictured is a Barry White/Love Unlimited Orchestra 45 with "Love's Theme" on one side and "Sweet Moments" on the other. The former song is originally from the album, "Under the Influence of Love Unlimited." This 45 was released in 1973 by 20th Century Records.

Shown is a Beatles 45 that includes "We Can Work It Out" on one side and "Day Tripper" on the other. Both songs were written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney.The album was released by Apple Records, Inc.

Shown is a KISS 45 with "Calling Dr. Love" on side A and "Take Me" on side B. Both songs are originally from the Casablanca LP, "Rock and Roll Over." This 45 was released by Casablanca Records, Inc. in 1976.

Shown is a Leo Sayer 45 with "Haunting Me" on one side and "Easy to Love" on the other. The latter song is originally from the Warner Bros. album, "Thunder in My Heart." This 45 was released by Warner Bros. Records Inc. in 1977.

Pictured is a 45 promo featuring both a Stereo and a Mono version of "Anytime (I'll Be There)" sung by Frank Sinatra and written by iconic singer/songwriter Paul Anka. The album was released by Warner Bros. Records Inc. in 1975.

Pictured is a Sheena Easton 45 containing two different parts of the song "For Your Eyes Only." The song is originally from the Original Motion Picture Soundtrack "For Your Eyes Only." This 45 was released in 1981 by Liberty- a subsidiary of Capitol Industries-EMI, Inc.

Shown is a Steve Wariner 45 that contains "Some Fools Never Learn" on side A and "You Can't Cut Any Deeper" on side B. Both songs are originally from the MCA LP, "One Good Night Deserves Another." This 45 was released in 1985 by MCA Records, Inc.

Shown is a Bee Gees 45 featuring "Edge of the Universe" on one side and "Words" on the flip side. Both songs are originally from the LP, "Here At Last - Live." This 45 was released by RSO Records, Inc. in 1977.

Pictured is a 45 that contains the broadway song "Gigi" sung by Vic Damone with Percy Faith and his orchestra on one side and the "My Fair Lady" song "On the Street Where You Live" sung by Vic Damone with Percy Faith and his orchestra and chorus. The former song was recorded in February of 1958 and the latter song in April of 1956. The album was released by Columbia as part of their Colukbia Hall of Fame series.

Pictured is a K.C. & The Sunshine Band 45 featuring "Get Down Tonight" on side A and "You Don't Know" on side B. The former song is from 1975 and the latter song is from 1974 and originally appeared on the album, "Do It Good." This 45 was released by T.K. Records.

Shown is a Van McCoy 45 featuring "Find A Way" on one side and "To Each His Own" on the other. Both songs are originally from the " Faith Hope & Charity" album. This 45 was released by RCA Records in 1975.

Shown is a 45 featuring "Swearin' To God" by Frankie Valli on side A and "Why" by Frankie Valli on side B. Both songs are originally from the LP "Closeup." This 45 was released in 1975 by Private Stock Records.

Pictured is a 45 that contains "Goldfinger" by Shirley Bassey (from the movie of the same title) on side A and "How Can You Tell?" by Shirley Bassey on side B. The album was released by United Artists Records as part of their Silver Spotlight Series.

Shown is a 45 featuring The Rolling Stones's "No Use In Crying" on one side and "Start Me Up" on the other. Both songs were originally released on the album "Tattoo You." This 45 was released in 1981 by Promotone B.V.

Pictured is a Columbia 45 with one side featuring "Piece of My Heart" by Big Brother and the Holding Company with Janis Joplin as lead singer and "Kozmic Blues" on the other side by Janis Joplin. The former song was released in August of 1968 from the album "Cheap Thrills" and the latter song in October of 1969 from the album "I Got Dem Ol' Kozmic Blues Again Mama!"

Shown is a 45 titled, "Kim Carnes - More Love." Side A contains the title song and side B contains "Changin.'" Both songs are originally from the album, "Romance Dance." This 45 was released in 1980 by EMI America Records.

Shown is a 45 titled, "Scorpions - Rhythm of Love." Side A contains the title song and side B contains "We Let It Rock...You Let It Roll." Both songs are originally from the album called, "Savage Amusement." This 45 was released in 1988 by Polygram Records, Inc.

Pictured is a 45 titled, "Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers." Side A features the song "Here Comes My Girl" and side B contains "Louisiana Rain." Both songs are originally from the album "D*** the Torpedoes." This 45 was released in 1979 by Backstreet Records of MCA Records.

Shown is a 45 titled "What have I done to deserve this?" by the Pet Shop Bots with Dusty Springfield. Side A contains the title song and side B contains "A New Life" performed by the Pet Shop Boys. The album was released in 1987 by EMI-Manhattan Records- a division of Capitol Records, Inc.

This is a Strobascope Disc. I think it is to test the revolutions of a turntable for different speed records. It is to be viewed as it is revolving for different size records with a Neon or fluorescent light. Can anyone tell me when this Disc wasused . Thanks for the help.

I had this in storage with other lps. My daughter's roommate has a turntable...she asked me if she could get my albums to play. I came across this. I think it's very collectible. Does anyone have any advice about how to get it appraised and where to offer it for sale? I have no idea.

Picked up this cool little collection for a "song" at a garage sale -- came with about 45 45's. A little trip down memory lane. Lucky for me the former owner had the same taste in music as me -- I probably had most of these at one point or another!

Can someone tell me more about this album.I,ve looked online and found one that looks about the same but has only one (An Original Soundtrack Recording) on it.The one I saw had 2 of them one on top and bottom.Please help me find out what year this is from and if I have a keeper.Thanks a bunch.

I picked this up recently, it is the same type of machine in the picture with Nipper (the dog) for the Trademark of His Masters Voice. Known as the Improved gramophone Trade-mark style No 5 1897 - 1902

Nipper pictured with the machine is also an original, made of papier mache from Ohio. The machine came with the very rare record box and 36 Berliner records, these 36 were made between !895 - 1900

This is a very rare record, it was made on the 20th of April 1898. The recording is by William Cody (Buffalo Bill Cody) the tittle, Sentiments on the Cuban Question. I have been told there are only 4 known copies of this record, including mine. There may be more, just not known where they are.

Pictured is the beloved double LP record album titled "Judy at Carnegie Hall" from 1961. Garland's appearances at Carnegie Hall in New York are arguably her best performances. The second and third photos are of the inside and back of the cardboard sleeve.

These 5 records were given to my parents back in the early 70's near Buffalo NY. I have recently started some research on these records. They appear to be original records based on some identifiers within the records but not 100% clear on that matter yet. We have had them stored safely for many years and just this week played the records for the first time in 35 years. They were great! My journey researching these records have been so much fun.

Pictured is a record album from the 1970s titled, "Starring Fred Astaire." It includes Astaire's Brunswick Recordings from 1935-1938. The inside of the cover (middle picture) features pages of photographs and the history of the recordings.

This is one of my Prized 45 rpm's! We met Lisa, and backed her up when she performed at the Opry in Liberty. She is very talented and has the number one most requested Christmas song. Along with Vince Vance and the Valiants, they recorded "All I want for Christmas is You" on the Valiant label in 1989. Lisa was the Lead Vocalist of the Group. We are proud to have Lisa and Vince for Friend's and Treasure this Personalized 45 directly from Vince and Lisa. They are Both extremely Talented and Friendly!!

First photo taken in 1958, part of my father's phonograph collection, taken in his "shop."
In front of gal:
on top right= Zonophone
on top left= Edison Home (model) phonograph
on lower right= Edison Gem " "
and big cabinet holding all= rare early electric Edison
Behind gal:
Herbert Talk-O-Phone, sitting on top of Hexaphone (only partly seen). The Hexaphone has its own page with details, listed under jukeboxes.

The rest are more current views of the Zonophone:
The big round red object is the Mobley reproducer. It held the steel needles which played the records. The last shows the ornate rod supporting the horn, and the nice wood detail on the body.

Original decals are important on the old phonographs. There are some reproduction decals being made for the Edison machines, but I doubt any for this one. The 2 on this machine are original.

Zonophone phonograph in the family 55 years, at least according to this photo! :) Wish I could say where it came from. Pop travelled through, NJ, NY, PA, MA, VT, etc. This was his machine shop, but for quite a while it looked more like a phonograph museum.
BTW, he took us to see Edison's lab in NJ, including the Black Mariah (early film studio...just a big room on a track which allowed it to rotate to catch the light). At the time, the Edison basement has not yet been completely detailed. GOK's what they finally found down there. Wish I could have explored!

Enjoy!

PS: For original Zono story and more photos look under same title with #1 at the end.

The Universal Talking Machine Mfg. Co. of New York, was founded in 1898 and marketed the Zon-O-Phone, disc (flat) record player, until 1904 when the company was bought out by Victor, as in Victrola.

Made between 1901-1904, until the addition of the Royal Grand model in 1905, this front mount Grand Opera, with glass viewing window on the back, was the TOP OF THE LINE Zonophone for Universal Talking Machine. Said to be able to play five 10” flat disc records with one winding, the table is 9”. The green felt on the table is original with one circular streak from wear by the reproducer. The 30” original brass horn has a few small dings on the cup, a shallow fold above where it lays on the arm, and mottled tarnishing from 50 or so years of non-use, The horn was shiny when my father acquired it. The connector is an original brass elbow. The crank is original.

Equipped with a red metal Mobley reproducer marked patent May 8, 1900. Although not original, the reproducer (needle holder) is contemporary to the machine, and is often found on the Zon-o-phones, since their original head was quite fragile.

The wood is in wonderful condition, a warm rich reddish brown, with faint age-crazing on the finish; decals are intact with good color. Base of machine measures 13” x 16”. The metal platform over which the table sits is embossed with ornate raised lettering and designs; the table turns freely. As with other machines I inherited, I put lemon oil on the wood, and high quality light sewing machine oil on the mechanism inside. According to Reiss, this is given a 4 out of 5* rarity (fairly rare).

This is another one of my father’s phonographs, which were collected in the late 1950’s-early 1960’s. As far as I know, he made no changes or restorations to this machine. Although it turns freely, I haven’t played it in years because I don’t have any metal needles. The needle was inserted into the reproducer and could be used only ONCE! All I have is just a small empty tin which the needles came in (various brands).

Just recently I found the original PAPER label underneath the base. It has printed basic blah blah wording, with a hand-written price of $45 and the manufacturer # 9456, also hand-written. This was exciting for me since I never thought to look underneath!

I lied when I said the Hexaphone was our favorite as kids…well, just a little lie. We loved this old phonograph too. When Pop got it the brass horn was bright and shiny, and of course the glass window in the back allowed us to watch the mechanism work.

I have a photo from 1958 taken in Pop's shop with some of the phonographs owned at that time on another page, same title but with #2.
Look for more detailed photos of this machine there too.

If you're an audiophile, you are very familiar with these four chestnuts. They're all famous for their spectacular sound and ultra-wide dynamics.
1. Lyrita (a U.K. product) This one is the best of the best Lyritas, a label about which has been said "There is, nor never was, a bad Lyrita" 2. The Telarc label needs no introduction. Most telarcs have a very wide dynamic range and quiet surfaces. This particular one, "Ein Straussfest" by the Cincinnati Pops led by Erich Kunzel, Has those dynamics in spades, and then some. This is one of those rare disks where users are cautioned to check their volume before playing, especially if they value their woofers. 3. Jazz at the Pawnshop is acclaimed by audiophiles as one of the best and most real live recordings of all time. Proprius is a small Swedish label that recorded on a budget with the simplest equipment and miking techniques. The results were world class! The performances are mediocre but the recording hits every little "nook and cranny" with real space information. It is like being there. Record no. 4 is another Proprius, an unlikely Organ and Saxophone recording (not too many of those) in splended sound. This one offers something completely different for a brand new listening experience.

Pictured is a record from the early 1970s titled, "Remember Marilyn." It contains songs sung by Monroe that were taken directly from the original motion picture soundtracks. The inside of the album cover (the middle picture) shows pictures of Monroe as a baby and as a young model prior to her breakthrough in the film industry, when her hair was still brown and she hadn't yet undergone rhinoplasty.

Shown is a record from the 1960s titled, "An Evening with Boris Karloff and His Friends." It features, according to the description on the cover, "Original soundtracks from Universal's greatest monster movies narrated by Boris Karloff." Some of these movies include "Frankenstein," "Wolf Man," "Dracula," and "The Mummy."

Shown is a record from the late 1970s or early 1980s titled, "Hollywood Park's Greatest Hits." It features a mixture of actual and recreated recordings of some of Hollywood Park Racetrack's most famous calls.

Pictured is a record album from 2010 titled, "Harold and Maude: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack." It is one of only about 2,500 and comes with a booklet, posters, a bonus 45, and a 33 in the color/pattern of your choice (I chose a radiant cobalt blue, as shown above).

This is the 1964 release of MEET THE BEATLES! The First Album by England's Phenomenal Pop Combo. Released by Capital Records T 2047 was recorded in England and released in the United States in the year 1964. The item is in good shape no tears one corner of the sleeve is slightly bent.

The Credenza has a rebuilt pot metal soundbox in great condition and is an early 4 door model with the turntable in the center of the cabinet and the name "Credenza" on the metal identification plate. When the turntable was moved to the right, the designation changed to VV 8-30 so this shows this example to be an early model.
The Victrola XI or Victrola The Eleventh was one of the most popular machines Victor ever made with an estimated total of over 800,000 floor models produced. This example has the original thin taper tube or arm and the Exhibition soundbox. That's a 1903 Mason & Hamlin Parlor Organ in the background!

This is an Abbott & Costello live radio program from the original broadcast. It was originally recorded on December 12, 1946 and was recorded on this Album in 1977. This Album was sponsored by Camel Cigarettes.

Hi everyone. Looks like CW has a new vibe. A nice little surprise today! Lets just say I have these records, as well as hundreds and hundreds more. All types of music, but mainly these old classical sets. I don't collect or listen to records. I have never actually used a record player, well maybe when I was 5 or 6, but not in a long long time.

I am wondering if people collect these types of records? Are these worth my time? Are there any in the pictures that are rare or collectible? What types of things should I look for? Or, are records like these a waste of time? Not sure, and the info. I found searching online is hard to comprehend.

Thanks, I appreciate it if anyone could tell me anything!! Have a great day all!

This was passed down and I cannot find one like it. I have found ones that are similar. We really are not sure if we should keep it to pass along or let someone else have it to restore. The case is 12" x 16", 9" deep. It does crank and turn, has a speed control and a bunch of needles.It is leather covered. It has a handle on the outside for carrying and is very heavy. Any insite as to where I can find additional info would be greatly appreciated.

Hi this is orthophonic Victorla victor talking machine a 1926 model
VV 4-3 connselette the sereal number is 026600
i bought it for $90 and most are $500 im guessing and i got a sound box and the only problem is the tone arm doesn't pivot its no big deal because i need a screw so there for now it doesnt move properly how much is this unit worth iw ill get it fixed thanks

This Record is on Mark 56 Records and it is one I have not come across before. Can any of our Lone Ranger and- or Coca-Cola Collectors out there tell me anything more about this. Looks like it was distributed in 1972.

This is from Sports Champions Inc. Auravision, a Product of Columbia Records, this is a 33 rpm Cardboard Record. It has never had the hole punched out and has never been Played. Still in New condition!!

Memories of Elvis
A lasting Tribute to the King of Rock "n" Roll
" MEGA RARE"
Candle lite / 5 LP / mail order/Vinyl Box Set
This is in Mint & Still Sealed.
It was made in 1978 , & contains 60 Songs. DML 5-0347
This is the Mega Rare Second Box Set in the Collection of Candle lite
Music Series. The Artist - Robert Charles Howe - Drew the "three Faces of Elvis" And Signed it on the bottom Right of the Picture Album Cover. Measures 12 1/4 " x12 1/2 " x 3/4" It Was found in a sealed box of old records in my moms home.

are there many demo reference recordings for the 1st album floating around? I have not found anything on the internet about one. I have had it for about 35 years. I am from the San Francisco Bay Area and I got it at the Marin County flea market

I uncovered these Four 78 RPM Record sets . They have four records in each set. The First set is N.B.Cs. Chamber Music Society of Lower Basin Street with Dinah Shore as Special Guest and also Sidney Bechet, on Victor Records. The Second set is Eddie South -- The Dark angel of the Violin on Pilotone Records. Third is New American, on Capital Records and Last is Piano Reflections by Joe Reichman -- On Victor Records.

One of my favorite 45 eps, found in garage sale back in the 80's.
This is the Django Reinhardt who might have been, recorded only two months before his death from a stroke. With a French bop rhythm section in tow, he thoroughly adapts himself to the prevailing idiom while allowing himself plenty of gypsy-flavored runs and those unique harmonic turns of phrase. Reinhardt's sharp attacks, fast runs, vibrato, and bright tone on electric guitar delineate the links to Les Paul much more clearly than his acoustic guitar recordings do (explicitly so in one of Paul's famous vehicles, "Brazil"), and runs like those on "Confessin'" must have had an effect upon Chet Atkins. Clearly, Reinhardt would have been a leading, distinctive light of mainstream bop-grounded jazz had he lived and toured outside France. He could also play the blues convincingly on the cool, swinging, and droll "Blues for Ike" (for the newly inaugurated President Eisenhower?). Nevertheless, there is a strain of melancholy that runs through most of this collection, nowhere more so than in his heart-stopping closing rendition of his tune "Manoir de Mese Reves" (also known as "Django's Castle"); one could read a portent of impending mortality into this. Issued on 10" LPs in the 1950s, first on Mercury, then on Clef, mutilated in the '70s with overdubs by a group called Guitars Unlimited, and not issued on CD until the early '90s, these sessions have not been given their due among historians. But they are indispensable for a total understanding of his music. ~ Richard S. Ginell

The only song, that I am aware of, by the duo. The record had a lot of regional success. Was #6 on KRLA in April 1962. Released on Donna Records it charted #79 on 8/9/1962 on the Billboard hot 100. Great song.

I remember the album cover for "Whipped Cream and other Delights" by Herb Albert being my favorite since I was really young. My parents owned the record and the music is not bad. I am really attracted to great use of color and design. These are four of my favorites, although there are many others out there as well. When I was in high school art class we had to design our own album cover for our favorite group. I did one for deep purple, not because I was a huge fan, but because I thought the color aspects would be fun to play with. I guess that I like the idea of mixing media with pictures, artwork and typesetting.

Bob Dylan recorded this album in 1965. It is recorded on the Columbia Label. This next Album is a Memorial Album for Ritchie Valens with his Greatest Hits. Sadly, Ritchie Valens Died in a Chartered airplane crash on February 3,1959.Other Entertainers who lost their lives in the crash were: Buddy Holly and J. P. Richardson, aka The Big Bopper. They are gone from this World, but their Music and their Memory will live on.

First is "Santa's Got a Brand New Bag" Recorded on the Rhino label in 1988. The third one is "Cut Ups" recorded on Motown Label,recorded in 1982 for radio spots for his new album at that time "Bill Cosby Himself".
We all know who the first and Third are by, but who can tell me who that Guy is in the Middle ??

First is "Smokey Robinson and the Miracles" on Tamla Label,recorded in 1965. Next is "The Best of Joe Tex" on Rhino label. I am not sure of the year of recording. Next is "The Best of Pearl Bailey" on Roulette Label and I am not sure of the Recording Year. It may be on the Label, but it is SS.

Found this LP at a garage sale 22 years ago.Anyone one have any idea which country it was made?It is just one of a box of Beatle albums i have collected over the years.Soon to be found at the local thrift shop when the kids donate them after the wife and i pass.LOL.

This is a Presidential Profile of President John F. Kennedy, from 1966. It is narrated by Art Baker and in pretty good condition.
It's numbered #35, I would assume that they came out with one for every president. It appears to have been put out by the First Federal Savings & Loan Association of Oakland (MI).
Whenever I find Kennedy related items, I snatch 'em up.

purchased in april 1969 when bought a new record player. liked it for the drums beat or 'bass', used to turn bass control on record player to full and treble control to minimum. record player ittkb cost £25 mono, but you could add a stereo unit on which looked same as front part with chrome speaker grill.

purchased in 1964-i used to give this one a good 'blast' when parents went out in the evening for about 3 hours- i might have upset the neighbours in the house next door!-single at 45 rpm.-fast pop music.

1. The Police - March of 1979 on Impossible Recordworks recorded at "Whisky" in Los Angeles - Album Title "Vinyl Villians"
2.John Mayall - 1977 on London Records Album Titlle "Primal Solos" - with Eric Clapton, Mick Taylor and Jack Bruce.
3. Best of the Doobies - 1981 on Warner Brothers.
4.Leon Russell - 1974 on Shelter Records.

I found this today at an antique shop in a nearby town. This is new to me , as I have never owned an album of this size before. A regular 33 1/3 album measures 11 & 7/8 inches across and this one measures a whopping 15 & 15/16 inches across !!The information on this Label says the Veteran Administration had it recorded. I will hang it on my Musik wall as there is no way I can play it. Any info would be appreciated !

Bet you have not seen these in 50 years. Bet you do not have the player to play them on eather. Wonder how I could get one again. The old fun from yesterday and it is now gone.
Never know what someone will find when going through things.

Recorded in Jimi's New york apartment on 4/23/68. Jimi is accompanying himself on effect-less electric guitar.(from back cover).This record is a Japanese release on light green vinyl with a blank label.There is a psychedelic version to the song "Angel" which is very good but this version is for myself the best song he ever wrote.Some of the lyrics from "Angel" were supposed to have been recited at Jimi's funeral.

Here is two more that I have collected over the years and now in my archives. The wonders of Pokey a runaway bear and his adventures also Poo and friends. I also at this time have a vintage Tiger that bounces and is very good condition.

Do you still have the machine to play these 45's. Been a long time since I have read these stories and listen to the records of the story.
These are old and very much vintage. 45's are as old as I can remember and even before the large records that lasted longer than the 45's.

This is a very unique little record for recording your voice right on to the record. Quite a sophisticated technology for the time period when the Megaphone was in use.

Here is the wording on the wrapper.

DIRECTIONS
Take this metal disc and play it as you would any ordinary recond on a phonograph. To obtain the best results use a loud tone needle. Sing into the sound box loudly and distinctly. If possible use a megaphone. When you have finished, play it over again and hear YOUR VOICE.

It is advisable before using to let the needle go once over the disc to remove dust particles which may have accumulated.

PatentApplied For

If any one has any information on the exact time period these were issued - would appreciate learning about it.

I know that Edison discs where introduced in 1930 using a unique machine to record the voice - as I have serveral of these.

The first record is Mary Wells on 20th century fox after her motown years.The next one is a first pressing of Ritchie Valens "La bamba" b/w Donna.The third is linda jones and the whatnauts and 4th is The Escorts with "look over your shoulder"rumored to have been recorded while the group was locked up in Rahway prison.

4 of about 30 cassettes recorded between 1972-2000. see cassette photos for dates-recording details, 45rpm records between 1962-1970 transferred to cassette in 1972, same in 1982 from the 1970s, and radio 1 in 1988, new zealand radio stations in 1973 when visiting brother in nelson city may-july.

First is a recording of four artists from 1955, back in the studio that started all of their careers. Recorded in 1985 at Sun Records in Memphis Tenn. Next is a Picture Disk recorded in England by H Bomb on Axe Killer Records. Last, but certainly not Least, is Remembering Marilyn, with a twelve page photo booklet that is attached inside the fold out cover.

Hi Found this item at yard sale. Just trying to find out year that it was made? It does work but it hard to move the needle onto the record. It does not seem move very good over the record. It plays 78. Thank you

Found this Beatles 45 today its a Import of some sort but can't find any info on it. Anyone have any ideas? The record is Blue with No writing on label, just whgite labels. tracks: side A, Rock and Roll Music & Shes a Woman. B side: Day Tripper & I Feel Fine. Thanks

Here is an example of bootlegging vinyl of yesteryears. This is a un-authorized release of songs from from "Naz", Naz, Naz", and "Naz, Naz, Naz" albums, similar to a "best of" compilation album. The Amazing Kornyphone Label also known as "TAKRL" records are becoming more collectible as the years go by. Many have no or little printing on label and must be identified by deadwax etchings, this lp reads TAKRL 1936.

I am the second owner - this was my stepmother's. This 5-tube (12SA7, 12SK7, 12SQ7, 50L6GT & 35Z5GT)) radio is in excellent condition. The radio works GREAT! You have to let it warm, though - and the volume is good, but you can't blast it. Some stations are louder than others (the Giants baseball game is coming in REALLY loud on KNBR!) No Station drift or volume loss.

There is a slight hum when it radio is turned on and goes away as it warms up. I get several AM stations in the SF Bay Area with no external antenna wire (there may be an internal one). There is a bass/treble tone button, too! Speaker has NO buzz, and has a really good tone! Permanent Magnet Dynamic (PDyn) Loudspeaker (moving coil) / Ø 4.81 inch = 12.2 cm.

The 78 RPM (ONLY speed) phonograph works, too! 12 INCH 78s WILL fit on it! There is a hum in the motor - could probably use a good cleaning or oiling. HOWEVER - there is a needle in the arm, how old? Who knows? - you can hear the record play, but NOT through the speaker. So the sound feed from the needle arm to the speaker is impaired - maybe a bad needle, maybe a broken wire? There is an extra needle in the case (see pic), but I don't know if it is for this unit. It is marked 1960. ON/Off switch for the turntable inside the lid, as well as a radio/phono switch on the front.

The wood case (They call it a tablemodel box WITH lid) is in very good condition - some minor (not deep) scratches on the top of the lid, and one 'bump' in the fabric speaker cover, upper left (DARNED old cat!). It looks like the back panel has never been removed and probably has the original tubes in it - hard to believe, I know! Screws show no signs of use! But my stepmother's first husband was pretty fastidious - he engraved the number in the back - he labeled everything.)

I drove about 60 miles in the rain to an estate auction because I saw they had boxes of 45's there. I patiently waited for them to come up, and avoided pushing them up to draw attention to myself. When they finally came up, some guy took me to $70 so I was pissed most of the way home. After sorting through the stash I felt a lot better because I found quite a few gems in pristine shape in that lot. These two 1966 G.I. Joe Space Capsule 45's were probably stashed in the lot mistakenly, because I did see all the G.I. Joe toys in their original boxes for auction. One is still stapled and never removed from original cardboard holder, while the other is in just pristine condition. Side 1 is Introduction To Manned Mercury Spaceflight, and side 2 is Actual Mercury Spaceflight Communications.

From my Grateful Dead collection I share on of my favorites, the debut album first pressing in Mono with original printed WB inner sleeve. I have many variations of this album including white label promo, Not For Sale, first press mono as well as all reprints.

My sealed copy of The Grateful Dead's album In The Dark from 1987. This tracks on this album are Touch of Grey, Hell in a Bucket, When Push Comes to Shove, West L.A. Fadeaway, Tons of Steel,n Throwing Stones and Black Muddy River.

would probably grade VG according to Goldmine Grading Standards
I have no outer sleeve so has a handful of scuffs and light scratches but cannot play test due to size. A friend recently gave this to me for my collection. Probably not valuable but unusual size is uncommon. I bought entire record collections (if dirt cheap) for years and never came across one of these either. Unfortunately most of the vinyl just got packed away.

This is an unusual item. This was a paper printed base with a clear sheet on top with record Grooves to promote the sale of a Readers Digest Collection of Kenny Rogers Albums, from 1986. I have no idea as to how many are out there, but this is the only one I have seen.

Grateful Dead 45rpm and picture Sleeve of Touch of Grey and My Brother Esau. This was Recorded in 1987 on Arista Records and is pressed in Grey Wax. As part of the fold out Picture Sleeve, there is a List of performances on their 1987 tour. and also great Photos of the Band Members.

Need help identifying these signatures...Thinking "LITTLE LEE", may be Lee Sutton (producer). Smiling Roberts? It is also signed by "GUNS", and Jimmie Stephens, however looks as he autographed it with a Y at the end of Jimmy, which may mean it was misspelled when printed...Any help would be appreciated..Goodwill find

This is a Victor made by Victor Talking Machine Co. Type P serial number 5030. Patented in U.S. and Foreign Countries Camden, New Jersey, U.S.A. There is a name plate on the side that reads W. J. Elliott Danville, Ill..This must have been presented to him as a gift. I've had this for years and it plays just find. You can also see the Victor dog on the horn. The wood and the horn are in excellent shape. It has survived all these years. They really made things to last back in the day. It plays a 10" record. Thers's a Bluebird record on it right now. It's called Saturday Nite- Fox Trot by Alvino Rey and his Orchestra. The Victor Talking Machine Company (1901–1929) was an American corporation, the leading American producer of phonographs and phonograph records and one of the leading phonograph companies in the world at the time. It was headquartered in Camden, New Jersey.

Tim Weisberg, Smile. Rod Stewart, Foot Loose & Fancy Free, from 1977 and The Letterman. The letterman are doing a Beatles Song written by Lennon and McCartney --- Hey Jude, and another by Simon and Garfunkel. One of my Favorites --- Scarborough Fair.

I have this motorola mahagany wood radio/record player, i cant find anything out about it. I hope someone will be able to give me some information on it, model, price, anything! have been looking for months. please E-mail dead_rose1970@yahoo.com, or if u can post info here any information would be greatly appresiated. I know it was made in Illinois i believe sometime in the 40's post WWII

Trying to identify and date these old Japanese 78s and see if they are of interest to anyone. My father lives near Sierra Vista, AZ and got them in Japan in 1946. From the viva-tonal label on the Columbia that one seems to be 1928-1932.

This is the Victor Victrola model VV-XI that I purchased this summer at one of those half antique store half perpetual garage sales that seem to be popping up in our area.

This Victrola plays beautifully, is very clean and is one item shy of being complete (the cabinet key). There is zero veneer damage and no musty smell. It even has the needle cup that I was looking for for my first Victrola that I could find for no less than $40.

While bargaining price with the proprietor a deal was struck, at which time I was informed that if I loaded up the player I had to take the box of records too. There are about fifty of them (including Bing Crosby's White Christmas) that are stuffed into albums. An added bonus in the carton was a box of new needles and an unmarked RCA Victor record index that was meant to be a running list of the albums you had collected.

elton john/kiki dee-'dont go breaking my heart', also reverse side-the rocket record company. this was a uk number one hit during that heatwave summer of 1976. i used to hear this eveywere i went, mainly because of the heat doors and windows were left open and people sunbathed in gardens and parks with radios on so the music went out into the streets, a memory of that famous uk heatwave summer-a rare event in the uk these days!

I have a Airline Record Player / Recorder / PA / AM radio. It will record radio or microphone. It has one arm for recorder and one arm for 'reproducer'. It's 78 or 33 1/3 rpm. It's in a green fabric covered wood case. I'd love to know more about it and what its worth!

We were helping clean out our local American Legion Post and the Commander found this tucked away in a corner of a storage room. There is a service sticker on the inside of the cover dated 6/16/66. All of the tubes inside look brand new. We haven't tried turning it on but we can't see any reason why it wouldn't work perfectly. The Commanders' Dad was Commander of this post before him so he's been involved with this building since his birth and has never seen this before. What a treasure!!!!

I just aquired this vogue picture record,which appears to be the rarest of the rare vogues...with a little research I found that it appeared on ebay in 2007 and went for 6200.00 dollars...I am wondering if before I put mine on ebay would that be a fair starting price in 2012. and or does anybody know of a collector that would do a better premium price?? if so email timothy_bolger@yahoo.com

These are from The Life History Series. The First is Volume #4, History from1829 thru 1849-- The second Photo is Volume#9, from1901 thru 1917 and the third is Volume #10,from 1917 thru 1932. I have the other Volumes in this MASS of Records and when I find them, I will Post Them.

I would say this has been one of my LUCKY finds! I purchased this Collection of Rare Jazz and Blues albums. Many were Blue Notes! 16 crates for $600.00 from the daughter whos Father was a Recording Studio Owner that recently passed and she wanted them all to go! Well after 14 hrs of sorting and checking prices, they came to over $32,000.00! Most were still sealed and a lot of Box sets. I posted a few pics of the collection. Not only that she gave me a Box of Studio headphones that came to be $2500.00 in total. I can say Dizzy is a Happy Collector!! YAHOOOOOO!!! LOL

This is a Woolworth Double record LP. One is a Christmas recording by the Woolworth Choral Group from 1961 (I didnt know Woolworth even had a Choral Group!) The other LP is "Mr Woolworth Had a Notion" with "A Musical Revue by Michael Brown" After 40 years of collecting, I believe this is my First!!!

Few more of my Beatles Records. Get Back to Toronto has some cover wear but record is FAB! My white album has the perforated pictures still attached. I know some have them seperated. A must for any Beatles Fan!!

More of My "The Monkees" collection. I think everyone has seen the Tv Series at one time. Of coarse we Lost Davey and it was a Shame they left him out of the Memorials during the Awards Ceremonies. But We all Love Davey and remember him by his Music and Acting! Gods Speed Davey!

Hey Hey It's The Monkees!! When I was a Kid use to run Home from Bus Stop to catch THE MONKEES! These guys were the All American Style kids back then, Crazy and Just Plan Fun to watch! More Monkees Coming!

The Ink Spots were a vocal group in the 1930s and 1940s that helped define the musical genre that led to rhythm and blues and rock and roll, and the subgenre doo-wop. There you go Folks, just a few of my Records on THE INK SPOTS!!

The Ink Spots were a vocal group in the 1930s and 1940s that helped define the musical genre that led to rhythm and blues and rock and roll, and the subgenre doo-wop. The Red Vinyl is The Ink Spots Greatest Hits on Crown Records. A Few more coming, check next post!!!

The Ink Spots were a vocal group in the 1930s and 1940s that helped define the musical genre that led to rhythm and blues and rock and roll, and the subgenre doo-wop. Couple of Sealed Ink Spots records!

The Ink Spots were a vocal group in the 1930s and 1940s that helped define the musical genre that led to rhythm and blues and rock and roll, and the subgenre doo-wop. Still have a few more! Check next post!

The Ink Spots were a vocal group in the 1930s and 1940s that helped define the musical genre that led to rhythm and blues and rock and roll, and the subgenre doo-wop. Have few more to show, check next post.

DOUG CLARK AND THE HOT NUTS SUMMER SESSION & RUSH WEEK GROSS RECORDS. Doug Clark and the Hot Nuts, also known as Doug Clark and his Hot Nuts, The Hot Nuts and, since the death of Doug Clark in 2002, Doug Clark's Hot Nuts, is a rhythm and blues, rock and novelty band that has played party and club dates for more than fifty years. Starting in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, they became famous on the college circuit in the southeastern United States in the early 1960s for their risqué song lyrics and jokes, and for allegedly performing in various states of undress. Their signature song was Hot Nuts. Other songs that they were known by included: My Ding-a-Ling, Big Jugs (based on Big Bad John), He's Got the Whole World by the Balls, Baby Let Me Bang Your Box, The Bearded Clam (is a delicacy that won't be found in the deep blue sea), Gay Caballero and Two Old Maids. It has been said that the Hot Nuts were the inspiration for the Otis Day and the Knights group in the movie Animal House. Their first album had a picture of the band on the cover, with Doug Clark "flipping the bird" to the audience. All of the Hot Nuts albums were on the "Gross" label, a subsidiary of Jubilee Records created solely for the band. Even though Jubilee published a line of "party" records with risqué material, the Jubilee name did not appear anywhere on the Gross albums. Doug Clark and the Hot Nuts influenced contemporary artists such as Too Short and Ol' Dirty Bastard.

The DeFranco Family, featuring Tony DeFranco, was a 1970s pop music group and family from Port Colborne, Ontario, Canada. The group, all siblings, consists of Benny DeFranco (born 11 July 1953), the guitarist; Marisa DeFranco (born 23 July 1954), the keyboardist; Nino DeFranco (born 19 October 1955), the second guitarist; Merlina DeFranco (born 20 July 1957), the drummer; and Tony DeFranco (born 31 August 1959), the lead singer.

BOBBY GOLDBORO HONEY UNITED ARTIST RECORD LABEL UAS 6642. Top the Charts in 1968. "Honey," also known as "Honey (I Miss You)," is a song written by Bobby Russell. He first produced it with former Kingston Trio member Bob Shane. Then he gave it to American singer Bobby Goldsboro who recorded it for his tenth album Honey.

Ray Charles Robinson (September 23, 1930 – June 10, 2004), known by his shortened stage name Ray Charles, was an American musician. He was a pioneer in the genre of soul music during the 1950s by fusing rhythm and blues, gospel, and blues styles into his early recordings with Atlantic Records. He also helped racially integrate country and pop music during the 1960s with his crossover success on ABC Records, most notably with his Modern Sounds albums. While with ABC, Charles became one of the first African-American musicians to be given artistic control by a mainstream record company

Labor relations take on a whole new meaning in George Abbott's filming of the hit Broadway musical, with garment worker activist Doris Day and factory foreman John Raitt playing the enemies-turned-lovers. "Steam Heat", "Hernando's Hideaway" and "I'm Not at All in Love" are among the memorable Adler / Ross tunes enhanced by Bob Fosse's choreography. Special video edition includes outtakes of the unused "The Man Who Invented Love" number and original theatrical trailers for Day's "Romance on the High Seas" and "Calamity Jane", and Adler and Ross' "Damn Yankees

The Hillside Singers were an American folk group. The ensemble was assembled by advertising agency McCann Erickson for the purposes of singing in a television commercial. McCann Erickson had written the jingle "I'd Like to Buy the World a Coke" for Coca-Cola, and had sought to have The New Seekers sing it, but The New Seekers could not fit the project into their schedule and turned it down. McCann Erickson then got in touch with producer Al Ham, who then put together a group of singers for the project (including his wife, Mary Mayo, and their daughter Lorri). The commercial began airing late in 1971 and was extremely popular, convincing Ham to rewrite the song as "I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing" and to record an album and a Christmas record; the single hit #13 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and #5 on the Adult Contemporary chart, which convinced The New Seekers to issue it as a single as well.

STEVIE WONDER UP-TIGHT TAMLA RECORD LABEL 268. Uptight (Everything's Alright)" is a 1966 hit single recorded by Stevie Wonder for the Tamla (Motown) label.[2] One of his most popular early singles, "Uptight (Everything's Alright)" was the first Stevie Wonder single to be co-written by the artist.

Isaac Donald "Don" Everly and Phillip "Phil" Everly, together known as the Everly Brothers, are country-influenced rock and roll performers, known for steel-string guitar playing and close harmony singing

CANDI STATON I'M JUST A PRISONER FAME RECORD LABEL ST 4201.
Candi Staton is an American soul and gospel singer, best known for her 1970 remake of Tammy Wynette's "Stand By Your Man" and her 1976 disco hit "Young Hearts Run Free".

THE SENSUOUS BLACK WOMAN MEETS THE SENSUOUS BLACK MAN RECORD ALBUM KENT LABEL. Seems I finally found some use for my Vintage Tiddlywinks! Now that I have COMPLETELY Sensored the album cover, I hope this meets with CW concerns about the Zodiac symbols. This album is a HOT subject back in the 70's as much as it is Today! But be what it may, I feel this Album has a part in Record History regardless on how some may feel. Its not here for the WOW factor, I'm a collector and I take my Collection seriously. I'm PROUD to have this as well as so many other Albums that have shown Nudity in one way or another over the past 60 yrs. Its up to the Eye of the beholder, if you don't like move on, if you do then cool! Its a interesting Album and YES it does make you wonder how they got away with it back then, but it was a limited edition album. Not carried by most all Stores, more of a seek and find tyoe of Album. But it was put out by Kent Record who was one of the Big Dogs in Soul Music. So Sorry if it offends you but I find it just as Artistic as the Icart with sexual contact happening or the kunisada-triptyich posted here showing sexual contact. Its Art to me thats all Folks!

JOHNNY CRAWFORD STARRED IN "RIFLEMAN" GUEST STAR RECORD LABEL G-1470. Played Mark on the Rifleman back in the day. Used to watch the show every week. Johnny started his singing career around that time and his Teen hit was You're Nose is Gonna Grow".

THE RIP CHORDS HEY LITTLE COBRA COLUMBIA RECORDS CS 8951. Bruce & Terry were Bruce Johnston and Terry Melcher. The pair were instrumental in the development of surf rock, recording under a variety of names, most notably with the band The Rip Chords.

LITTLE CHILDREN BILLY J KRAMER WITH THE DAKOTAS IMPERIAL RECORD LABEL. Little Children, Da Doo Ron Ron, Dance With Me, Pride, I Know, They Remind Me Of You, Do You Want To Know A Secret, Bad To Me, I'll Keep You Satisfied, Great Balls Of Fire, It's Up To You, and Tell Me Girl.

THE VOGUES YOU'RE THE ONE CO & CE RECORD LABEL 1229. The Co & Ce label of Pittsburgh also had an unknown link to Chess, as their LPs seem to have been either pressed or distributed by Chess.
Meet The Vogues [You're the One] - Vogues [1965] You're The One/Hang On Sloopy/Make It Easy On Yourself/Catch Us If You Can/Baby Don't Go/You Were On My Mind//1-2-3/Ain't That Just Like Me/My Girl/It's Not Unusual/Nothing To Offer You/Lover's Concerto

]]>Records / LP Recordshttp://www.collectorsweekly.com/stories/66485-the-vogues-youre-the-one-co-and-ce-recordhttp://www.collectorsweekly.com/stories/66485-the-vogues-youre-the-one-co-and-ce-recordTHE STANDELLS THE MOST TALKED ABOUT RECORD OF THE YEAR! BANNED!http://www.collectorsweekly.com/stories/66484-the-standells-the-most-talked-about-reco
Thu, 23 Aug 2012 07:56:27 -0700

THE STANDELLS THE MOST TALKED ABOUT RECORD OF THE YEAR! BANNED! The Standells are a garage rock band from Los Angeles, California, USA, formed in the 1960s, who have been referred to as the "Godfathers of Punk Rock", and are best known for their 1966 hit "Dirty Water", now the anthem of several Boston sports teams.

Club Custom Deluxe Record Player. This was the Record Player used in DAnce Halls, Clubs etc. back in the day. I have searched the internet World over and can't find another. Plays and works like it was Brand New and is in Near Mint condition. All the Bells and Whistles with Gold Plates and Trim. Wonderful Vintage Piece!

THE OSMONDS SEALED SELF TITLED ALBUM MGM 4724. Around 1971 I believe, it was thier Debut Album. Record producer Mike Curb saw the Osmonds (no longer called "The Osmond Brothers") perform as a band and recognized that they combined a rare mix of polished performing style, instrumental skill, and vocal talent.

So here We have John and Oko on the cover of Two Virgins. I don't have to tell whats under the Black strips! So here We are again with another Avant Garde Album Cover, "They Naked"!!! The album's title came from the couple's feeling that they were "two innocents, lost in a world gone mad", and because after making the recording, the two consummated their relationship. It was distributed by Track Records in the United Kingdom and Tetragrammaton Records in the United States, after EMI in the UK and Capitol Records in the US refused to handle it, because of the cover photo. But It is what it is!

DONNY OSMOND SEALED ALBUM COLLECTION MGM RECORDS. These have never been opened and I quess they will stay that way. Donny was young back then and I remember watching Donny and the rest on TV weekly back then. Great Family!!!

SUPER RARE ALBUM REM BLUE FAN CLUB ISSUE LIVE SEATTLE MUSIC HALL SPLIFFOOI. You don't find many of these Rare Gems around. REm Live at Seattle Music Hall 1984. Record Labels are white with number 1,2,3,4 on each side.

A few more Great Import Albums. The Bee Gees cover was all typed by hand with errors! They started the first side songs but made a goof and just restarted the list below goof. Some of the letters are typed over others. Messy cover but I like it!. The Ventures Album is a PUZZLE? It is in the cheap cover but all english. Numbered WS-1169 but can't find any reference to this album ever been made with this cataloge number? Old Bootleg??

A few more Imports, Herb Albert and Bees are Black vinyl. You can see that everyone I have shown has the thin paper covers sealed in plastic. Common for most ALL imports from Japan, China etc. Sometimes the quality of recording is not the best on these albums but they Loved out Music back then!

Import Albums are one of the things I like to look for. Not that have any high value but it's just cool to see how other Countries were in to Music from the United States back in the 50's-early 70's. Many Imports are colored records with Orange being the most common, Red, Green and a few others. Not all are Japanese! Some are plan old black vinyl with the language of country on label as well as covers. Covers seem to be thin paper with a plastic sleeve incasing the cover. Record then slides into plastic sleeve. Covers do seem to deteriorate faster than normal covers due to cheap paper. But they are fun and PRETTY! LOL

JIMMY SOUL AND THE BELMONTS SPIN O RAMA RECORDS! Born James McCleese in North Carolina Jimmy hit it big with "If You Want To Be Happy"! Posted some of this one youtube so go take a listen to some Real Soul!

BRENDA HOLLOWAY EVERY LITTLE BIT HURTS ON MOTOWN RECORDS! I would say this would be one of my Favorite Soul Albums. Brenda in my opinion was one of the Best Soul singers of the 60's and never got the Huge Fame she deserves! Listen to her on youtube and you will agree!

ELVIS PRESLEY PICTURES OF ELVIS PART 2 "PICTURE DISC"! I have always loved Elvis from the time I could turn on the Radio! As a youngester, I had a huge Elvis Collection only to find it all gone after I went into Military. Mother sold it all in a Garage Sale!. If you bought any Elvis Records in Conway Ar. 1985 time, I WANT THEM BACK! LOL

ORIGINAL SOHO SKIFFLE GROUP ON TIME RECORDS! Talk about a Hard Record to find these Days! This Group came out of Britain back in the 50's and then became The Vipers. this is a promotion copy and I have uploaded some of this on youtube, user: dizzydaves2007.

I mixed these up a littlt bit! The Coasters -- Thats Rock & Roll,John Mayall and the Blues Breakers with Eric Clapton (one of my favorites), The Lords of Flatbush and The Everly Brothers. (Think Back !!)

some classics from my 45 collection .we were just playing the little steveie and my children were trying to tell me that it wasnt stevie wounder and well its heard to tell the younger kids ,,i just play them and tell em to listen and enjoy!!!!!!!!

#1 for Musik ..Do you have this one ? On Big top Label
Sammy Turner -Lavender-Blue and Wrapped up in a Dream
#2 The Elegants -Getting Dizzy -Little Star on APT label
#3 Bobby Rydell -I Dig Girls -We got Love
#4 Jackson 5 -Dancing machine -It's to Late to Change The Time ( sung by a young Michael Jackson)

Here is a 1967 Vintage Record from United Artists, The Good, The Bad & The Ugly with Clint Eastwood. This is the Original Motion Picture Soundtrack. The record is still in very nice condition, plays very well.
I listened to it several times and enjoyed it.

]]>Recordshttp://www.collectorsweekly.com/stories/65576-1967-vintage-record-the-good-the-bad-andhttp://www.collectorsweekly.com/stories/65576-1967-vintage-record-the-good-the-bad-andLook what I found Kerry in my 45's :-) These are just some of them http://www.collectorsweekly.com/stories/65561-look-what-i-found-kerry-in-my-45s--t
Mon, 13 Aug 2012 16:40:20 -0700

I have not looked at my 45's in years today I opened 2nd suitcase full of them and on top was " Mickey Mouse " ! I just played it and no scratches . I am delighted . I am now into moving more upstairs . This suitcase I think was one I packed that had ones I really liked in it , Lots of 50's Bobby Vinton, Bobby Vee , Chubby Checker and the list goes on . But I had to share Mickey Mouse Club .

These were apparently close outs as record stores closed . Marked Hits you missed . They have a hole punched in them on label area
#1 Jerry Butler 45 -Moody woman -Go Away Find yourself on Mercury
#2 Ann Peebles 45-Part time love -I still Love you on HI Label
#3 The Brooklyn Bridge and Johnny Maestro 45-Blessed is the rain-Welcome Me Love on Buddah
#4 Chairman Of The Board 45 Bless you -Pay to The Piper on Invictus a UK Label

Remember these Great Female Vocalists? Different Styles but still Great performers,every one!! Do you remember these Ladies Mikie???

]]>Records / LP Recordshttp://www.collectorsweekly.com/stories/65211-mama-cass-elliotkitty-wells-and-carolehttp://www.collectorsweekly.com/stories/65211-mama-cass-elliotkitty-wells-and-caroleSome old 45 labels and a CW song I made. New Re do today to fix it http://www.collectorsweekly.com/stories/65181-some-old-45-labels-and-a-cw-song-i-made
Wed, 08 Aug 2012 19:46:19 -0700

This is just a few record labels I have found as I sort my 45's a big task . While doing that I made a video for all the CW people . If you veiw full screen you may see your name :-) and CW staff's . I made it from the live WIL's broadcast out of St Louis 1958 and was first time "Rockin Robin was ever played on air . You will hear the commercials as well .
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0uMcQpcA304&feature=youtu.be

Went to a Garage Sale a few weeks back, had listed Records in sale so thought I would give it a shot. Older man had a milk crate with albums and to my surprise some good ones as well. Price .25 cents each. Well I grabbed 90% of the crate and paid the man. Walked to my truck and loaded them up but thought I should look at some pottery he had. To my surprise the fellow walks out his basement door with hand full of records and refills the crate. Once again I'm looking and stacking when the man says 'If you like more I have some in basement" Well took my New stack and headed in "Motherload of Soul" !!! Price .25 cents each. I'm a Happy Record Collector!!!! This Ike and Tina was in the stack, and its in very very good condition, like New.....lol

I FOUND THIS IN A LOCKER, AT A 3RD GRADE SCHOOL , THE WAS CLOSE DOWN FOR 20 YEARS R SO. WORKS LIKE A CHARM. HELP

]]>Records / Phonographshttp://www.collectorsweekly.com/stories/64809-33-45-76-78-playerhttp://www.collectorsweekly.com/stories/64809-33-45-76-78-playerWoodstock 2 was originally released in 1971 as a double LPhttp://www.collectorsweekly.com/stories/64607-woodstock-2-was-originally-released-in-1
Fri, 03 Aug 2012 18:47:39 -0700

Woodstock 2 is the second live album released of the 1969 Woodstock Festival concert. The 2-LP set contains more material from many acts featured on the first Woodstock album with additional performances from Mountain and Melanie. I will not post front cover .

Woodstock 2 was originally released in 1971 as a double LP
Woodstock Music & Art Fair (informally, Woodstock or The Woodstock Festival) was a music festival, billed as "An Aquarian Exposition: 3 Days of Peace & Music". It was held at Max Yasgur's 600-acre (2.4 km²; 240 ha, 0.94 mi²) dairy farm in the Catskills near the hamlet of White Lake in the town of Bethel, New York, from August 15 to August 18, 1969. Bethel, in Sullivan County, is 43 miles (69 km) southwest of the town of Woodstock, New York, in adjoining Ulster County.
"Jam Back at the House" – 7:28
"Izabella" – 5:04
"Get My Heart Back Together" – 8:02
Tracks 1–3 performed by Jimi Hendrix.
"Saturday Afternoon/Won't You Try" – 5:54
"Eskimo Blue Day" – 6:22
Tracks 4–5 performed by Jefferson Airplane.
"Everything's Gonna Be All Right" – 8:36
Performed by The Butterfield Blues Band.
"Sweet Sir Galahad" – 3:58
Performed by Joan Baez.
"Guinnevere" – 5:20
"4+20" – 2:23
"Marrakesh Express" – 2:32
Tracks 8–10 performed by Crosby, Stills, Nash And Young
"My Beautiful People" – 3:45
"Birthday of the Sun" – 3:21
Tracks 11–12 performed by Melanie.
"Blood of the Sun" – 3:35
"Theme for an Imaginary Western" – 5:03
Tracks 13–14 performed by Mountain1.
"Woodstock Boogie" – 12:55
Performed by Canned Heat.
"Let the Sunshine In" – 0:50
Performed by the Audience during Rainstorm, after the Joe Cocker performance.''
During the sometimes rainy weekend, thirty-two acts performed outdoors in front of 500,000 concert-goers.[2] It is widely regarded as a pivotal moment in popular music history. Rolling Stone called it one of the 50 Moments That Changed the History of Rock and Roll.[3]

The event was captured in the 1970 documentary movie Woodstock, an accompanying soundtrack album, and Joni Mitchell's song "Woodstock", which commemorated the event and became a major hit for Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young.

Loving Couples, a weak PG movie about spouse swapping featuring Susan Sarandon, Shirley Maclaine, and James Coburn vanished without fare. The soundtrack features songs by Syreeta, Billy Preston, Jermaine Jackson, and the Temptations faded even faster. Motown's promotional efforts were minimal at best. The only single release deserved a better fate "Take Me Away" by Temptations featured Glenn Leonards' exciting, shimmering falsetto on a beautiful, lilting ballad. Jermaine Jackson's instrumental "Bass Odyssey" appeared on his debut LP; it's O.K. but fails to live up to its grandiose title. Billy Preston & Syreeta's "With You I'm Born Again," not featured here, had scored heavily so Motown featured both artists on solo sides. Billy Preston's "I'll Make It With Your Love," and Syreeta does two: an uptempo "Turn Up the Music," and the romantic "And So It Begins."

I think this is a pretty obscure Do-Wop Label from the 50s Can you tell me anything about the artists and/or the label? I found a few things, but very few . I am trying to find a discography of the labels few years that they recorded. Any help would be Greatly appreciated. Thanks

I am sitting here listening to Sha Na Naa "Get a Job" as I post these . Just a couple I had on hand upstairs to share . My cabinet is old 1950's record cabinet meant for LPs it lifts up and closes with LP's in upright position how they should be stored never flat .It is all Elvis in there . Musik has me inclined to get downstairs at my 45's .
Sha Na Na is an American rock and roll group. The name is taken from a part of the long series of nonsense syllables in the doo-wop hit song "Get a Job", originally recorded in 1957 by the Silhouettes

Billing themselves as "from the streets of New York" and outfitted in gold lamé, leather jackets, and pompadour hairdos, Sha Na Na performs a song and dance repertoire of classic fifties rock and roll, while simultaneously reviving and sending up the music and 1950s New York street culture.

Classics like:::
"Macho Duck" !
"Disco Mickey Mouse" !!
"Zip-A-Dee-Doo-Dah" ???
"Its a Small World" ????????
Wait a cotton pickin minute here! I admit it, i hav'nt listened to this. BUT COME ON NOW, "Its A Small World" sung in the "disco" style???
Why not let Minni sing "Frampton Comes Alive"?
Or Goofy taking Angus's place & rock out to "Back In Black"?
How about a "Snoop-Lion" melody? are you happy now eye???
YOU BET , NO SUB-CATAGORY!

Just discovered I have the Beatles on Four different Labels. The first is Love Me Do, Tollie Records, The flip side is P.S. I Love You. The second is Yesterday,on Capital Records. The flip is Act Naturally. The Third is She Loves You, on The Swan Label. The flip is I'll Get You. The Fourth is Let it Be, on Apple. The flip is You Know my Name (Look up my Number)

]]>Records / 45 Recordshttp://www.collectorsweekly.com/stories/64325-beatles-four-hits-on-four-different-labehttp://www.collectorsweekly.com/stories/64325-beatles-four-hits-on-four-different-labeHere are three more you may rememberhttp://www.collectorsweekly.com/stories/64322-here-are-three-more-you-may-remember
Wed, 01 Aug 2012 08:34:42 -0700

Etta James,The Dixie Cups and The Crystals. One of the Greatest Vocalist of our time, Etta James, left us with some Great Music to Enjoy.

Here comes the Chub! Two Fifties and one Sixties 45s I have uncovered. I am sure I have more of the Chub. I will post as soon as I uncover them.

]]>Records / 45 Recordshttp://www.collectorsweekly.com/stories/64320-chubby-on-parkwayhttp://www.collectorsweekly.com/stories/64320-chubby-on-parkwaySun Labels-- Two from the 50s and One Newer of Elvis First recording for his Motherhttp://www.collectorsweekly.com/stories/64318-sun-labels--two-from-the-50s-and-one-ne
Wed, 01 Aug 2012 07:11:00 -0700

These first two are originals from the Fifties and the third is a newer 45 of Elvis First Recording for his Mother, which started the Super Career of Elvis Presley. "My Happiness" was recorded to this 45 directly from the Original Tape. I had to Have it !!!

My OCD! I was collecting Records as a kid many yrs back. Went into Military in 1980 spent 6 yrs away from Home and you guess it, Mother sold all my Albums. Well I just can't live without Vinyl so I started up again about 20 yrs back. And it has gotten to be my OCD but I'm not complaining! I spend at least 2 hrs a day with my Collection. Lost count but I'm around 15,000 at this time. I also upload Rare Soul, Jazz, Doo wop, Rock, Garage Band, on youtube under dizzydaves2007. Kids GRAB them Vinyls you never know how much it may be worth or HOW much Fun you can have listening to some Good Ole Tunes! Take it from Me, nothing like the Needle hitting the Vinyl, Snaps, Crackles and Pops!

It's 1958 radio on the CRUISIN' series and in St. Louis it's the sound of Jack Carney, a man whose sense of humor made it seem he was trying to add a "D" to his station's call letters, WIL. That would have put him in Boston, on WILD, another of the several stations he worked in the Fifties; Jack was one of radio's gypsies before he settled down in Missouri. This was where he made his mark, concocting bizarre stunts that appealed to so many (mostly teenagers) his station went from number seven in the seven-station city to number one six weeks after he joined the staff. He invented a character called Pookie Snackenberg, who became a hero to St. Louis teens. He asked listeners to pull the tuning knobs off their home and car radios so the dial couldn't be moved from WIL - and weeks later irate parents still were digging through the three barrels of knobs Carney had received from their sons and daughters. He offered twenty dollars to anyone who showed up with a bird on his head (after playing a record called Bird On My Head) and there were fifty takers standing around with birds in half an hour. And when it was time for summer vacations to end he asked for fifty words or less - he said he'd settle for one - on "Why I am delighted to be returning to school," the winner to be driven by Carney to class and home each day for a week, in a limousine. Hokey. But Carney's presentation of "The Silver Dollar Survey" was one of the most influential programs on radio at the time.

Rock and roll was going through some peculiar peregrinations in 1958. Its popularity continued to accelerate, but several stations (one of them in St. Louis, coincidentally) began celebrating "Record Breaking Week," during which deejays broke all the rock records in their station libraries to dramatize what was termed, prematurely, "the demise of rock and roll." Dick Clark's "American Bandstand" was pulling eight-million-plus viewers daily and Alan Freed was grossing more millions (in dollars) with a road show that included Jerry Lee lewis, Buddy Holly and the Crickets, Chuck Berry and the Diamonds. Yet, the phrase "rock and roll" itself was being avoided by talent agencies, promoters, even Freed himself. (He preferred "the Big Beat.") And...Elvis Presley was drafted into the Army.

As for the music, it was beginning to get a little "gingerbread-y" (after the Frankie Avalon hit of the same name), as "Bandstand's" voracious demand for personalities and songs turned Dick Clark into rock's Henry Ford. In Philadelphia - also known as Brotherlylovesville - dance crazes, hit records and super-stars were created almost daily, on ABC-TV at five.

The Everly Brothers, Jerry Lee Lewis, the Coasters and others continued their gratifying string of gutty, boistrous teenaged hits...there was a lot of excitement left...but rock and roll just wasn't quite what it had been.

It was a period of settling in on the international scene as well, a period of shifts and starts and stops. Nikita Kruschev was named the new premier of the Soviet Union, Charles DeGaulle became the decade's second general to be elected a president, and there was a new Pope (John XXIII) in the Vatican. President Eisenhower, having recovered from a slight stroke, ordered U.S. Marines into Lebanon, while Egypt and Syria became one nation. And as an atomic sub slipped under the North Pole, the U.S. launched its first satellite...and nuclear test ban talks began.

Other headlines in 1958: Boris Pasternak won the Nobel Prize in literature...the Yankees took the World Series over the Braves..."Gigi" got the best picture Oscar.

The first song on this volume captures the gingerbread-y feel of the period as well as any other. At The Hop by Danny and the Juniors got is big push on the Clark show (where dances were important time-fillers), stayed in the number one spot for five weeks, and offered little musically. (You could stomp to it.) It was Danny's only gold record.

Another hard rocker that stayed at the top for five weeks in a row was Tequila by the Champs, essentially an instrumental, the only discernible lyric being the title, which was shouted in the sort of chorus you'd expect to hear on a Saturday night in a border town honky-tonk.

Love has been the thing about which most popular songs have been written and in R&B and R&R the song about love often becomes something of a novelty number, thanks to the composer's light approach. Example: Book of Love by the Monotones, who ask the burning question: Who wrote it?

And then there's good old Chuck Berry. He wasn't singing about love, not the kind most singers were. His love was aimed at things, usually cars, and in this CRUISIN' volume, Rock and Roll Music. Berry asked no question in this song, making a definitive statement instead: "It's gotta be rock and roll music/If you wanna dance with me." It became an anthem and sold in the millions.
Naturally.

An interest in folk music accelerated in 1958 (as the Kingston Trio sang Tom Dooley) and Jimmie Rodgers recorded his second, third and fourth million-sellers. One of them was Kisses Sweeter Than Wine, a cheery ballad which was (get ready) adapted from an old Irish folk song.

The first side closes as it opened, with another pan of gingerbread baked in Philly, Short Shorts by the Royal teens, one of whose memebers was a skinny singer named Al Kooper. Q: "Who wears short shorts?" A: "She wears short shorts." With a beat.

Chantilly Lace was written and sung by J. P. Richardson, better known as the Big Bopper. His voice- which was a lot deeper than the song - became one of the real emotional favorites of 1958 and the record was the third most played. Rock had a rollicking sense of comedy in the Fifties and this is a good example.

Besides humor, there was a compulsive faddishness about much of rock. Some of the songs here show this, such as when the Royal Teens sing about short shorts and Danny and his pals sing about a record hop, they take as their subjects ones which will be out-of-fashion soon thereafter. Another of these faddish types was Bobby Freeman, a vocalist who liked songs about dancing. In 1958 he had a burning question, too: Do You Wanna Dance? (Answer: Are short shorts sexy? Is a record hop fun?) Shortly afterwards, Freeman was able to make a rhetorical announcement: Betty Lou's Got A New Pair Of Shoes.

Bobby Day's Rockin' Robin was an ornithological sock hop allegory, no mean feat considering the rather narrow lyrical perimeter of the era.

Get a Job is still another of the rock classics and it was recorded by the Silhouettes, still another of the one-shot groups: one smash, and then silence. The opening "lyric" caused the song to be categorized as a parody of all the "doo-wop" sounds of early rhythm and blues: "Dib dib dib dib dib dib dib/Sha na na na..." Good clean fun.

If the Monotones never learned who wrote the Book of Love, Harvey and the Moonglows offered the Ten Commandments of Love. The Moonglows were organized in 1951 in Lousiville, Kentucky, were sponsored by Alan Freed a year later, and signed with Chess in 1954, where they also recorded as the Moonlighters on the sister Checker label. As the Moonglows they also appeared in the exploitation flick, "Rock, Rock, Rock."

CRUISIN'S 1958 volume closes with another of Dick Clark's boys, one of the more imaginative, Duane Eddy, who initiated the now famous "twangy guitar" sound, playing the melody on the bottom instead of the top strings of his guitar. Rebel Rouser took its title from the Rebels, his backup band, and was his first million-selling single. Duane was born in New York, was "discovered" in Phoenix by deejay Lee Hazelwood, and found stardom in Philadelphia, where Clark acquired an interest in Duane's management and recording companies.
More good clean fun.

This is one of the most popular Admiral models of the early 50s.
With a dark brown Bakelite case and gold accents on the faceplate
and the turntable, it’s an attractive addition to any collection.
It features AM radio and a four speed turntable.

You can see and hear it here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OTo1wW1GclU&feature=plcp

The IX was a very popular upscale tabletop Victrola. It was available in either mahogany or oak finishes, but mahogany was by far the most popular choice. The progressive suffix letters after the serial number indicate minor changes to the design (location of speed control, type of tonearm support, etc.). The cabinet also went through several minor design changes. Small “feet” were added to the cabinet in 1915.

The 48-1200 uses the same mechanism as the popular Philco 46-1201.
It features a unique “no-fuss” needle and tone arm design. Simply open the drawer, slip in the record (10” or 12”) and close the drawer. The arm drops automatically at the beginning of the record, and the record stops turning
when it reaches the end.

The RCA Victor 45 players were the “ipod” of their day. You would just pack a bunch of 45s into your case and take your records and portable player to a party or a sleep-over.

Manufactured by RCA starting in 1950 it included a built-in 3-tube amplifier and speaker and featured a completely redesigned record changer. Up to 13 or 14 records can be stacked at once! This model boasts excellent sound quality when the lid is closed and is also a favorite of collectors today.

The German Grundig company was establised in Nuremberg in 1945 and made high-end audio equipment for listeners who had the ears—and the money—to appreciate advanced recording technology. This console features stereo which had recently been introduced, preset sound controls, equalization and the most notable feature: the Elac Miracord 9 tonetable with a tone arm that could detect what size record was being played. You could stack records of the same speed and any size, 12”, 10” or 7” and it would play them all in one sitting! The radio features FM and two shortwave bands.

RESTORATION
This stereo was restored for a client who specifically wanted a console with mid-century styling and it had to have legs. When we first acquired this stereo the tonearm was broken and the previous owner had replaced the cartridge with an incorrect one. The cabinet had scratches and water rings and the interior was filthy. We spent about two years tracking down a replacement for the tonearm and finally found a whole turntable and used the best parts from each.

You can see and hear it here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m9PTLhydTHQ&feature=plcp

The Brunswick Company was known for making billiard equipment. It was founded in 1845 by John Moses Brunswick, who joined Julius Balke in 1873, thereby forming the J.M. Brunswick and Balke Company. In 1879, Hugh W. Collender merged with Brunswick and Balke calling themselves the Brunswick-Balke-Collender Company.
Brunswick cautiously tested the phonograph market in the teens and then jumped in. By the 1920s, Brunswick was America’s second most important phonograph and disc manufacturer.

RESTORATION
This phonograph was in really bad shape. The “faux” leather covering was crumbling, the wood case had rotted in places and the record holder was missing. The motor was serviced and oiled. All the rotten wood was replaced as well as the covering and the rivets. The worn leather corners were replaced with nickel and the hardware was polished. The record holder was built from scratch and the Brunswick decal was created using a computer program and then sending out to have a dry transfer decal made.

You can see and hear it here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gkCHumeKbfM&feature=plcp

In 1950, Zenith introduced the Cobra-Matic variable speed automatic record changer – the “first and only changer that plays any speed record now made or yet to come, 10 rpm to 85...with two simple controls a six-year-old can operate.”
This particular model is highly prized among collectors and admired for it’s mid-century design that takes its design cues from the Detroit road queens of the 50s. This is one gorgeous hunk of Bakelite!

RESTORATION
This phonograph was restored using parts from three different units. Each unit had its problems but also had working parts that were good enough for a perfect one. All the capacitors and tubes were replaced. The turntable was sent out to be reflocked. The Cobra-Matic cartridge was replaced with a new old stock. The speaker grill was cleaned of rust and repainted and the Bakelite case was polished and buffed to a showroom shine

In collaboration with General Electric Company, Brunswick produced an acoustic phonograph for playing electrically recorded 78s called the Panatrope. Many believe this was Brunswick’s finest phonograph.
The S31 was one of the earliest electric phonographs, in a time when most phonographs were still wound up by hand. This model was sold as a Panatrope with radio.
The S31 was “radio at its best, even at high noon under a blazing sun...tone that for clarity rivals the finest night-time reception.”

RESTORATION
This phonograph/radio took over a year to restore. The motor was completely dismantled and serviced. All the major wiring which was very brittle was replaced with fabric-covered reproduction wiring. The variable capacitor which had mostly crumbled was replaced as well as the tubes. The tone arm was missing and it took almost a year to hunt one down. The magnetic horseshoe cartridge was not working and had to be restored. Veneer was missing in some spots and had to be matched and replaced and the cabinet was cleaned up and given a new coat of shellac.

You can see and hear it here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v4GKK2PCwJs&feature=plcp

Ok, today we are going to have a little cultural music lesson for all you CW friends that are too young to remember when music was real music, which heavily influenced what you are listening to today.
These are some more LP's I acquired in that storage building behind the junk store in Nevada.
You will note Aretha Franklin, Otis Redding with Little Joe Curtis and Gladys Knight & The Pips. These were some of the most influential Soul/R&B people there ever were, along with many others, of course.
Again, for all you young people that do not know what I am talking about here, let me help you out.
“Soul music has its roots in Gospel Music and Rhythm and Blues. The term 'soul' in black American parlance has connotations of black pride and culture. Gospel groups in the 1940s and 1950s occasionally used the term as part of their name. The Jazz that self-consciously derived from gospel came to be called Soul Music. As singers and arrangers began using techniques from gospel and soul jazz in black popular music during the 1960s, soul music gradually functioned as an umbrella term for the black popular music at the time. The term "soul music" itself, to describe gospel-style music with secular lyrics, is first attested in 1961.”

“Rhythm and Blues, often abbreviated to R&B and RnB, is a genre of popular African American music that originated in the 1940s.The term was originally used by record companies to describe recordings marketed predominantly to urban African Americans, at a time when "urbane, rocking, Jazz based music with a heavy, insistent beat" was becoming more popular.”
That will save you looking it up on Wikipedia, I did it for you, lets move on.
If you really want to see how great Aretha was, you must watch her as Mrs. Murphy in the all time great classic movie "The Blues Brothers."
Here is some FYI stuff for you:
John Belushi(aka “Joliet” Jake Blues) was from my home town and graduated High School the same year I did. I used to watch him perform in a band called The Ravens in H.S. The Ravens and the Leftovers would perform on Saturday night in the basemant of a building downtown.
More FYI stuff for you:
“Chicago based Alona's Dream Records made their debut recently with a reissue of a 45 originally released in 1965 by The Ravens. Hailing from the Chicago suburb of Wheaton, IL the band included high school students Michael Blasucci, Tony Pavolonis, Dick Blasucci, Phil Special, and a 16 year old future Blues Brother named John Belushi.”
“The band self released a single, “Listen To Me Now” backed with a cover of The Kingsmen‘s “Jolly Green Giant” in 1965, with fewer than 50 copies being produced. The reissue is limited as well, just 200 copies pressed with 100 on red and 100 on black vinyl.”
Tony Pavolonis was the President of my HS class(more FYI stuff.)
Ok, ok, I got a little off topic, sorry, but there you have it, a cultural music lesson for all you younger CW friends.
enjoy

This is a Valve out of a Locomotive we were re-building about twenty years ago. I decided I could put it to use as a 45 rpm holder. It will hold upwards of 100 45's and I have two of them. Thought I would post these because not to many folks have seen a Valve out of a LocomotiveEngine.

Here are several more LP's I picked up on my last adventure. Some more great Blues stuff. How could we ever forget "Please Mr. Postman" by the Marvelettes!
I have these already converted to CD and in my collection.

On my “Forgotten America” trip the last couple of weeks, I also did some picking. At this junk store, I was looking through a stack of LP's and the guy said “I have about 1200 LP's out back, you want to look through them?” Well, he only needed to ask me one time. It was in a storage type building and it was 104 that day. I did come up with quite a pile of treasures while sweating profusely. Here is some of what I found, for all you “Blues lovers” out there. I already have them concerted to CD and in my collection.
enjoy

Looking for info on this Grundig receiver and it's value. I think it is a from 1959 and it still works. It was left to me from my uncle who passed several yrs ago and I'm not sure if it is worth refinishing or even keeping. Can anyone help enlighten me?

First i should mention, about the title, i know im always cryin about how there no decient collectibles left in Okla. BUT, WOW, I FOUND IT! I FINALLY FOUND IT!! (again) . Doesnt pict.#1 & 2 just SCREAM 1977 ? Im talkin about my (former residence) storage building! As hard as it is to believe, i, at one time, was, how do u say it? worthless. Pict#3 is a cool halloween soundtrack (luv the graphics) Not completely, just wanted to feel sorry for myself, so i moved into a trailer home that sat on an acre of property "north of town" . YEARS past , then, i found my WIFE!. She quickly slapped the h*^ out of ... or into me & as the Clampets would say "we loaded up the truck & moved to" NOT Beverly. But nice. Pict #4 is, ah, I DONT KNOW! Ask Kevin, HES FROM TEXAS! After that, we didnt need to clutter up the house with stuff, we shipped it north. Two residences later, (# two is also still packed) we got plenty of room! Untill we fill this one up.

Today I was in my storage cleaning out things I have not seen in awhile . And Rock n Rolling into my feet was my old Magnovox very very heavy portable Player . I have shown the speed for all the records it plays but I am not familiar with a 16 ? 78' 33's and 45's all of them but a 16 size record? . It has a Stereophonic turntable and is a good 5 foot span when open .
Looking up 16 size I find this. Another size and format was that of radio transcription discs beginning in the 1940s. These records were usually vinyl, 33 RPM, and 16 inches in diameter. No home record player could accommodate such large records, and they were used mainly by radio stations. They were on average 15 minutes per side and contained several songs or radio program material. These records became less common when tape recorders began being used for radio transcriptions around 1949.
I believe this to be late 60's or 70's as it is stereo not mono . I do remember it could shake the house . It still works and I need to clean it as you can see from being stored so long . Time to break out all my records again I hear them calling " Elvis is in the house " !

Restored the radio sometime back. It's interesting as it is AM and FM manufactured in 1949. No AFC on the FM and very clear reception. AM is also stellar. Good tone. I just picked up the RCA record player. It has either been very well maintained or has been restored in the past. My guess would be it is original as it still possessed a non working factory part number cartridge. I picked up a new cartridge from Gary at Voice of Music and performed some adjustments to get it landing, rejecting and tracking correctly and wow, what fun. Listening to Elvis on this is like having a time machine to take you back to the 50's.

The Amazing Spiderman - The Invasion of the Dragon-men
Five exciting Spiderman adventures on one LP recording.
"The Invasion of the Dragon-men," "The Mad Hatter of Manhattan," "Return of the Conquistador," "The Abominable Showman," and "The Bells of Doom."

Features songs and stories about the Justice League of America including "The Flash in The Three Faces of Mr.Big", "Aquaman in The Deafeat of The Dehydrator", "Wonder Woman in The Return of Brunhilde", "Plastic man in The Invasion of The Plastic Men", and "Metamorpho in FUMO The Fire Giant." Also enjoy the songs "Plastic Man", and "Metamorpho The Elelement Man."
The stories are interesting, well-acted, and weird as all get out--the villainous Mr.Big is revealed to be a little kid.

Peter Frampton and the bee gees . original motion picture sound track. good condition . Rolling stones exile on main st. also good condition. and high tide and green grass the rolling stones. this one has a lot of pictures in side.

This super heavy-duty case was originally manufactured by the Hoffman Radio Corp. in the 1940's to carry the old 16 inch diameter heavy shellac transcription recordings. In fact, the case was full of records dated 1947 to 1949 when we acquired it. The records and their sleeves were placed within very sturdy hanging file folders. Good thing there were handles on all four sides because this is a real gut-buster. The outside dimensions of this unit are 22"wide x 26"deep x 23"tall. It took four of us to load it into my pickup LOL.

The foot locker, WITH the metal partitions AND the hanging file folders, as shown, weighs 95 lbs. WITHOUT the records! The records that were stored inside were not military. Somehow a local church in southern California had acquired this case and was using it to store recordings of their meetings, services, and performances. We contacted that church and donated the records to their archiving facility in eastern Kansas, along with the record player that came with them.

This item was passed down to us from an elderly family member who was an original member of that southern California church.

This recording was offered in 1966 is from the "American Bible Society"and is on Two records that are recorded at Sixteen and Two thirds speed. One side has written information and the other side is in Braille.

Walt Disney -- Treasure Island. This makes two of these Book and Recorb sets I have found. I suspect I will find more as I look through all of these 7 inch records. The book sets are 33 & one third speed.

This is an item that I have had for many years. My father gave it to me, as he was a repo man and had the opportunity to come across many really interesting items but for some reason I kept this one even though I don't enjoy baseball. It's a 78 recording of his farewell speech at Yankee Stadium and still has it's original inside sleeve, the label is still in great shape and so is the sound. The record is almost flawless.
So I decided today to share a few of my things with you. If anyone call tell me what's it's worth, that would be great. Thank you

I picked this up at a garage sale recently, I couldn't believe it when I saw it! Of course, I had to get it being a hot rodder.
It's in decent shape and plays well.
It's really cool to hear the announcer and the dragsters from a time before I was born!

Talk about rare...this is from 1969 and was only given to radio DJ's to proclaim the advantage of "Slurping." One side is a pop-psych song by this band called the Strange Things, and the other is 'tesitmonials' about how great 7-11 is! Funny, but not on purpose.

I found this in the house I moved into. I was wondering if anyone can help me figure out what this is? I tried searching every possible thing I could and all I know is that its a Dumont....? If you have any information that could help me figure out what it is and the worth could you please e-mail me??? Thank you! E-mail is Broken_pretty_pieces@hotmail.com

Three Decca Patsy Cline Albums that I picked up in a Thrift Store. From the look of these Albums, they have not been on a turntable but just a few times. They are Wonderfull. I will take as good of care with them as the previous owners. Are there any more Patsy Cline fans out there??

I found a unique 45 rpm today in a resale shop. These are pretty rare to find. Can anyone tell me who the Thirteenth floor elevators became later. I am thrilled with this FIND and it will go on my musik room wall!!

7" or 45 rpm record by MCA Records. The artist is Lyle Lovett and the song is Give Back My Heart. I am inquiring about it to find out how rare or if it even is rare. Here is a list of descriptions and things I think might be unique or rare.

Red transparent (see through) vinyl record with white label and black lettering. It clearly reads Promotional Copy Not For Sale on the label. The date and company on the label is 1987 MCA RECORDS, INC. Also stamped into the vinyl is the word Masterfonic. The actual stamp used to stamp the vinyl looks like it was well worn because the first 4 to 6 letters of the stamp were very faint and shallow. I don't believe this was normal wear because both sides of the record that were stamped are identical. Also Engraved into the vinyl are the following letters and numbers MC-23431-MI-5. I am not sure if the last number engraved is actually a 5 or if it is actually the letter S.
I am really trying to find out some info like rarity, production quantities and some type of value. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks for looking.

Here is a 45 rpm/ 7 inch record issued by The United States Army, it is the audio recorded live on February 2, 1949 when this rocket (Bumper #V) became the first man-made object put into space. You can hear the noise of the launch in the background, while someone is watching and narrating the event, as it happens. I came across it in a goodwill/thriftshop in Virginia. Amazing history, I love listening to it. You can really feel the weight and intensity of the moment.

The text on label reads:
"The Launching of Bumper #V"
"45RPM" "MMP-322"
"By THE UNITED STATES ARMY
and General Electric Company"

The information on the launching of Bumper #5 is easily found and in abundance. While I have never come across any information on the record itself or similar records of similar events. If anyone has any information regarding the record, it would be much appreciated!

Two of my older Children Records.One has a label on both sides and the other one only on one side. Does anyone remember these? I am pretty sure I have more of these records packed away somewhere and when they turn up, I will post them.

This is the #3 gramophone made by G&T all original, it is very similar to the trade mark model which is rarer to find. This machine came with an original leather case and 24 berliner records. Nipper is also an original made from Papier Mache.

Thomas Alva Edison SM (Spring motor) phonograph made around 1895. This machine is fitted with the very rare Bettini attachment (reproducer) and horn. The SM was later to become the Triumph phonograph utilising the robust triple spring motor.

This is a very nice Zonophone front mount gramophone, I think it was made around 1905. The machine is all original, maybe the reproducer is a reproduction. I have a thing for Zonophone machines and front mount machines.

I Know there are some Buddy Holly Collectors as well as Elvis. The chirping Crickets, I believe, is the only L.P. that was recorded when Buddy was alive. These other two are a lot of their great singles brought together. The Back cover photo is of the back of the Buddy Holly Story. Buddy's Widow wrote this especially for the many fan's out there. Hope you enjoy looking at these.

Thought you might enjoy looking at these albums. The Flaming Star is a special issue with Singer on the upper right corner. Elvis Golden Records is the sought after issue with the Blue lettering. The Canadian Tribute,as you can see, is a beautiful Yellow Disk. I just had to add it to my collection. Are there any more Elvis collectors out there on this site? Hope you enjoy these!

The restored phonographs at this dealer's booth were incredible - all in good working order. These instruments looked brand new, and unfortunately I didn't snap a pic of his fabulous collection of Nipper memorabilia and models (the RCA puppy).

Listening to an old wax cylinder on this gramophone instantly took me back to my childhood in the late '80s - the 1880s that is. :)

The Victor P has the dog and gramophone on the badge, The french machine which is exactly the same was made before the Dog and gramophone logo was used. The victor P was never sold apparently it was given away as a promotional item.

I bought this machine just for the horn, I like the machine too, but that horn is magnificent. There isn't a lot of information around about this machine, It was made around 1904 by the Gramophone and Typewriter Co in somewhere in Europe, maybe Germany or France.

Gramophone and Typewriter Co 1904/10 Oak Cockleshell gramophone pictured with a few different horns, the second horn is the largest unsupported horn made. The last horn is barely hanging onto it's original paint work.

The Sheraton model A is quite rare here in Australia, even rarer is the cabinet. I was very lucky to have been told about this cabinet by a UK collector and was able to have it shipped here.
The Sheraton A was made from 1907 to 1911, it has a very powerful 3 spring motor and an exhibition sound reproducer.

The machine on the right is the 460 Lumiére it was made in 1924 and proved not be a very good seller. In 1926 the HMV company used the left over cabinets to make the 461, sales were never spectacular. They are both very nice machines, the Lumiére is difficult to use, the diaphragm is large and heavy, the sound is very different reflecting of the the large lid. The 461 is much easier to use with excellent sound reproduction.

460 Lumiére Oak original sales total 867 with 484 of these returned to the factory. Mahogany sales were 877 with 223 returned to the factory.
461 sales were 615 oak and 618 mahogany.

information from His Masters Gramophone by Brian Oakley and Christopher Proudfoot

This is a very nice machine created by an artist, it may have been Arton from europe the same person that made the Buddha gramophone.
It is made from wood then coated with plaster and painted black. The pattern has then been carved into the surface exposing the plaster underneath, the pattern has then been coloured and sealed with shellac. I would like to know more information on this machine, feel free to comment and let me know what you think.

This is an all original condition Gramophone and Typewriter Co machine. I believe the pedestal to original for the machine but I don't think G&T made it. The cabinet and horn have the original finish in excellent condition for the age of the machine. The motor of this machine has a single spring which will play one record with a single wind, it may have played more when it was new.

Edison Triumph model B phonograph, mahogany cabinet and nickel plated deck made around 1906. Ideal folding morning glory horn, the horn is made with coated fabric and spring steel flat bars to keep the fabric taught. I have never folded the horn, I think that would damage it, it is not as flexible as it was when new.

RARE as Hen's Teeth! A **MUST HAVE** for ANY WWII German Militeria collector! An ORIGIONAL German made & produced 78 rpm record GRAMMOPHON by "Musikkorps Der Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler" Side "A" has "Deutsdsland" (German National Anthum) and "Die Fahne Hoch" (Horst Wessel Lied" -Most popular WWII German Nazi song known to anyone in the field of Military Collectibles)
Side "B" is "Badenweller Marsch". Record plays as if it was NEVER played before. Music is crisp and clean with no scratches!
You will LOVE how I found such a gem.....
The X-wife and I were killing time in some small, lame "antique shop" that was filled with over priced "brick-a- brack" that in my opinion should have been junked or donated to Good Will. Near the door there were two milk crates full of these vinal 78 rpm record, that looked and smelled as if they were in several floods while stored away in someones basement.
Killing time, the X-wife and I started going threw each crate, reading out record titles out loud one by one. Full of nothing and no name songs that didn't ring a bell....then my X reads out..." DIE FANNY HOCK" (not knowing how to actually pronounce the title, and reading it as if it were spelled phonetically).....my heart stopped and time stood still. I said "WHAT!!??", and again, with the mispronounciation she said "DIE FANNY HOCK"....I couldn't believe my ears, and by the look on my face, my X was like "what is that??" I was trying to control my excitement, while jumping up and down like a little kid, I kept telling her "Do you KNOW what this IS??...DO you KNOW what THIS IS!!!???"
She had no clue, and I had to explain it to her. She then got excited, because it was "HER FIND". I carfully took the record to the cashier, dug in my pocket for the loose change to pay the .99 cents plus TAX!!
I raced home, wound up the ol' Victrolla, put the needle down, and sweet harmony poured out of the double door speaker. Amazing. I then called my best friend, (friends since the 5th grade and we BOTH enjoy collecting antiques and Military memorabilia-he more to the German side of the hobby). We have always joked about finding the impossible. THIS VERY RECORD!! I waited for him to answer, and I played the record again....silence was his only responce....shocked and stunned, and in disbelief, I told him all about the "FIND"....Although it is the instrumental version of the song, I challenge ANYONE to go and find a Pre-WWII era copy of this song in this condition! Friends, it is next to impossible....

I picked this old radio up at a yard sale a while back and have been hoping to find some more information about it. I've been unable to find out how old it is or what kind of value it may have. It's hard to read in the picture, but the model number is RC-3200A - 3204A, depending on what color this finish is. Any information is appreciated.

Here are Three More Beatles. I have included a photo of the liner notes written by Tony Sheridan on the back cover for you to read-- Hope it is clear enough to read. The Tony Sheridan album is from Contour-- The Abbey Road is from Apple and the Lonely Hearts is from Capital.

Not many of these out there. I left the backlight on so you could see the texture of the album. You can read the circumstances surounding this recording on the back cover in the last photo. I am proud to have these two records in my collection. Hope you like them too !

Got this a long time ago from a friend.It is in excellent shape,record is NM. Dated 1966.
BTW ...... This is the original NOT the later RE-ISSUE with similar back cover and SAME catalog #; and It is my only record from New Zealand, although I have a 8 DVD set from Austraillia.

You are probably wondering why I uploaded this particular 45. Sure doesn't look like an Elvis record ..... Made by RCA Victor.....
1956, wait could it be ..... YES; IT IS!!!! the first Elvis break-in record.

Traded this for a bunch of cds. Ths version dosen't have the inserts; I guess the thought they weren't needed, the label is the old style grey and silver. I recently picked up a second copy of this . On the Paul Lichter Elvis Unique web site he says of the U.S. Pressing " This is the only copy known to exist!" So I guess this makes my copie Mega Mega Rare.

Here is all the Beatles albums i have managed to find, my step-dad owned a used record store back in the 1970's and when he closed he saved a bunch of these. I love how many different Beatles albums are out there some much rarer than others, pretty sure all the ones i have are pretty easy to find, but i still enjoy them.

Picked this up in a record store. uploaded it to Tom Mcallum's ElvisCanada; Neither he nor Barry Mclean had heard of it. I found a copy so there must be more out there.
When the US corrected the mono/stereo mistake all they did was change the lettering.....When Canada did thiers they made a whole new record which you see here. BTW I also have the Tan Mistake one Canadian and US.
Memories has an unusual number and it has 'If I can dream on the flip side.

I figured I couldn't hit a town-wide sale without bringing home something that had Coca-Cola on it somewhere, lol!! This became the #1 song on the charts in 1945, so it can't be too bad. I'll let you be the judge..... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KVVEj1v_ul8

There are three different versions of the Hi-Fi club record holder. The first pic is the U.S. version. The second is Canadian and the third is Canadian-French. The Canadian versions also have music notes on the spine and a record index page inside.

Does anyone remember these obscure albums from the past?? Sweet Level Headed had a song that stays with me still today. It was "Love is like oxygen". The standells are remembered for Their "Dirty Water" and Rosetta Stones "You really got me" may ring a bell for some. Can anyone name the Band Members??

I have this Old Victor Taking Machine and I believe the Model Number is VV-IV-A and the serial number is 381643. I am trying to find out the value of this. In addition, we have some records and additional needles.

I purchased this 45 rpm of Something/Come Together when the two songs were first released. The etchings on each side are the only way to distinguish side one's label from side two. Side 46991 is Come Together and Side 46992 is Something. The numbers are etched on the blank vinyl between the label and the end of the sound tracks. The two identical labels are placed on the 45 with the stem of the apple at 12:oo and 3:00. I love to hear the interesting stories associated with Apple Records. Was this a rare mistake, or was it fairly common for mislabeling to occur with Beatles records?

More garage finds. I don't know much about early jazz, but apparently Doc Souchon was pretty well known. This 45 is in a cardboard sleeve and is mint condition. I found a couple other 45s as well that he plays on, the records themselves are in good shape but they don't have the benefit of the full cardboard sleeve (just the lousy paper jackets). Would these be valuable to a collector? I have no record player, so I couldn't listen if I wanted to. Makes me wish I had held onto that old orange record player I had as a child! :-)

This is my display showing the Edison model A Fireside phonogragh that my grandparents purchased as a gift to each other for their wedding. They were married March 8, 1916. My Dad told me of the winter nights when his parents would sit and listen to this. Many years on a cold winter day my Dad would get this phonogragh down from his attic and get it running so that "I could see how it worked", but I now know he was loving it just as much as I was.

Here is a somewhat obscure recording on an equally obscure label from 1958. The label was located in New York, New York. This was the second recording from the label. The group was The Honeytones. The first recording of the label was a group named The Notables. The songs were"Moonlight and Roses" and "Under thebridge of Paris. I have not been able to locate this one yet.The executives of the label were Aberach, Aberack and Bienstock. Would like information on the first recording if anyone knows any.

I went through all of my magazines & tear sheets this week, saw the sun rise 3 times! 1,000's of ads, images etc. This is one of the many ads I am in love with & I finally found a frame it would fit. The image is bright & beautiful with little to no color fade. Nice little write up about celebrating the 4th & listening to the patriotic music Columbia offered. Ive been wanting to post this image for some time now, better late then never.
The other image is from the same magazine & was the illustration to a story, another I'm in love with.
Thanks for looking.

This is a Dolly Parton 45 with the single "I Will Always Love You" on the 'A' side. It is from the movie "Best Little Whorehouse in Texas" and copyrighted 1982.
With the death of Whitney Houston this song has come back into vogue, and Dolly was the writer and original artist.

This is my 1956 RCA Victor tube 4 speed record player new cartridge and needles and 3 new rubber motor mounts for a 56 year old record player this is one of the nicest sounding players I have ever rebuilt. This player has the original speaker

Can't believe I found this set of records! The box has some wear on it but the records look as though they have never been taken out of their sleeves. Can anyone tell me about these records? Please let me know if you can. As you can see, one side has the label writing on one side and the other side is in braille.They are all like this. Read in the of the King James Version.

Today I would like to share my latest resale store find from yesterday.
These are called “Hit Of The Week” records. They are nine inch 78 rpm records and were pressed with music on only one side of the disc.
Technically they are not cardboard, and were not made of shellac as was usual for gramaphone records of the era, but of a patented blend of paper and resin called Durium. As the name implies, new records came out at the rate of one each week.
These records were only produced for a very short perion of time, they debuted in Febuary of 1930 and the last "Hit of the Week"s were produced in June 1932.
"Hit of the Week" was an attempt to produce a product for the tighter budgets of customers during the Great Depression. Unlike other records, it was sold only at news-stands, not record stores, and the price was 15¢ ea., making them the cheapest new record available. Some of the popular artists of the time who recorded for "Hit of the Week Records" were Gene Austin, Duke Ellington (as Harlem Hot Chocolates), Eddie Cantor, Morton Downey, and Rudy Vallee.
Hope you enjoy these.

I received about 33 1/2 inch thick EDISON records. We threw away the old phonograph which in hind sight was not smart. I saved the records but I have no idea about value. I think they might be 78 or 80 records. Are some tunes worth more than others? Whatshould I be looking for in the records. They were dusty but in good condition. I have not cleaned them. How should I store them?

This is another from my mom's collection...has 10 songs like Big hunk of love, Wear my ring around your neck, A fool such as I, some songs have the Jordanaires singing in them, has folder and sleeve. Are these records collectible? How do you clean them or keep them clean? Just wondering

This record from my mom's collection has 12 songs like Wooden Heart, Blue Suede Shoes, G. I. Blues,Pocket full of Rainbows, and some of the songs include the Jordanaires singing with Elvis...it is a LSP 2256 and is listed as an original soundtrack recording. Shows seens of his movie on the back cover...just wondering if it was rare?